This poem,"The Drifter" was one of the latter. . . . . . .
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He walked down the street of this sleepy small town
Not a familiar face did he see as he looked around
He was a stranger just off an east bound train
Attire made “hobo-style” by the wind and rain
Not a familiar face did he see as he looked around
He was a stranger just off an east bound train
Attire made “hobo-style” by the wind and rain
HE’S A DRIFTER!
He left the family homestead at a very early age
A “new-be” on an unknown and hostile world stage
He’s walked, thumbed rides and hopped un-inviting trains
He’s survived the blazing sun, bitter cold and driving rains
HE’S A DRIFTER!
His list of acquaintances, at any one time, is very small
He remembers faces, but the names he can’t recall
This small circle of “friends” changes every couple of days
When a new town he happens upon in his wandering ways
HE’S A DRIFTER!
Author’s comments:
We could leave this poor individual, let’s call him. . . “Slim”, in this “town-after-
town-drifting-mode” until he has a fatal accident, gets deathly sick or
dies of old age. That would be a boring story and probably not a very
entertaining poem!
Since this is my poetic story and I’m making it up as I go, let’s change it!
Let’s see what we can make happen to “Slim” as he ventures into another
new town. . . . . . . .
It’s a wide spot on a
gravel road, a typical small western town
A mercantile, a cafe,
and a hotel where one could bed-down
Coming down the dusty
main street is the star of our poem
Yes, it’s Slim; a man
who it seems is destined to forever roam
Suddenly he hears the
cry, “Help!” from behind a weathered door
Checking, he finds an
injured man in severe pain lying on a dirt floor
He comforts the man;
Then, Slim, getting over his own state of shock
Took on the daunting
task, in an unfamiliar town, of finding a willing Doc
Luckily, find one he
did; Medical aid was applied with care and love
Easing the pain for
this man who had fallen from a loft high above.
Slim ably assisted the
medical man in the delicate task of doctoring
At this point in time,
Slim went from “Drifter” to a caring human being
Slim did the victim's
daily chores as the man's injuries mended
Life in a small town agreed with him and soon
his urge to roam ended
He saw an optimistic
future; All became rosy and, as we end this fable,
Our hero was to become
the proud owner of “SLIM'S LIVERY STABLE”
Stuff:
I did not know about the hobo code until I came across the following in the Internet . . . . . .'Besides a spoken code language of sorts, hobos also had a written code to communicate information with each other. The symbols they used and what they meant can be found at layers-of-learning.com - a Homeschool Curriculum Company
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