The Tramp
My brothers stay in cities
To gather shame and gold,
But I am for the highway
And the wind upon the wold.
They take the train each morning
To a dull, bricked-up place;
I trudge the living country
With the sunlight on my face.
I know no home or shelter,
No bed but good green grass,
Nor any friends but hedgerows
To greet me as I pass.
But though the road still calls me
To places wild and steep,
I find the going heavy;
My eyes are full of sleep.
The fields lie all about me;
The trees are gay with sap—
As I go weary, weary
To my great mother's lap,
To rest me with my mother,
The kindly earth so brown.
And Lord! But well contented
I'll lay my carcase down.
To gather shame and gold,
But I am for the highway
And the wind upon the wold.
They take the train each morning
To a dull, bricked-up place;
I trudge the living country
With the sunlight on my face.
I know no home or shelter,
No bed but good green grass,
Nor any friends but hedgerows
To greet me as I pass.
But though the road still calls me
To places wild and steep,
I find the going heavy;
My eyes are full of sleep.
The fields lie all about me;
The trees are gay with sap—
As I go weary, weary
To my great mother's lap,
To rest me with my mother,
The kindly earth so brown.
And Lord! But well contented
I'll lay my carcase down.
Translation:
Language:
Reviews
No reviews yet.