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A short poem about West Virginia. |
| If I were a lonely highway I would wonder up and down these gilded autumn hills and hollows that hug the curves of West Virginia Mountains, meandering here and there, past cow pastures, and log cabins, and abandoned mine shafts, forests thick with Christmas trees, looking for, searching so desperately, for the love I lost here many years ago and didn’t know I couldn’t live without till it was too late. Bright lights called forth from cities with bejeweled neon crowns calling me away from what was comforting and familiar, adventure and mystery promised, yet unfulfilled. Too late, I recalled the crow of the cock in the early morning dew, the crunch of autumn leaves, the smell of green grass now traded for cracked concrete. If I were a lonely highway, I would shed this hot asphalt like the skin of a shiny black snake grown too big for his britches and then... wander these lonely country lanes as the dusty, unpaved dirt road I was always meant to be. Dreaming, I lick my dusty lips and peddle away into the purpling shadows of the hills from whence I came. |