Keith Garrett
From yesterday is where i come from, my life is with a wife and child,
Seeking a new life and possibly a different place of settling down.
We are pioneers of the early nineteenth century traveling across
The hot desert where their is much hardship, sickness, and hunger,
There’s a chance i must take as my son is very sick with fever this day.
I say goodbye to all in our wagon train for now as i say perhaps there
Over the hill i will find help, faith walks with me as i begin my quest,
Over the hill to a different world as i pass over the top of the ridge.
Am i dreaming as these impossible things appear before my tired eyes,
The wagon train is gone, vanished into the air, this can’not be.
I see traveling machines, music, and that which can’not possibly exist,
People so different, i’m looked at so strangely as i tell of my plight.
My son is sick i say, He’s over that hill, a kind woman she was,
A bottle, something inside, these will make him better i’m told.
I must go now, I run for the hill, i climb as this world is not mine,
At the top i now see again my world and wagon train, i look back.
The world i walked into is now gone, only desert left behind, my son does not die .
You did have me wondering… I caught the variance. I watch the show on late-night television sometimes. 🙂
Keith, I started an anon site. Thanks for following both
Reblogged this on keithgarrettpoetry.
fine text, enjoyed it.
Thanks always
On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 8:04 AM, keithgarrettpoetry wrote:
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