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Ghosts of The Oregon Trail

Tall prairie grass, wind-swept and

burnished gold, whispers with the

long-dead voices of all who passed

on this trail in their dream voyage

to Oregon, or California, or who

died, disease-ridden, exhausted, to be

buried just off the rutted trail

under a lonely stretch of sod

or cairned atop a barren lava bed.

 

A bone-white wagon tongue,

its carriage long ago disintegrated

and fallen into splintery planks,

laps thirstily at the dry sod along the

edge of the trail, finding only

parched earth and no water, burrs

and beetles instead of hydration.

More prairie than desert but still

more a place to leave behind, only

insects, lizards, hawks and the curious

chickadees seem to make it home,

this dusty stretch of history.

 

Hawks hover, then spiral effortless

high above, as they did so many years

ago, dark against a soft patchwork

of azure blue sky and creeping clouds.

The occasional click of grasshoppers

is barely audible in the billowing prairie

grass shaken by the incessant wind.

Dry bones of beasts and luckless humans

hug the edges of the trail, mute testimony

to the brutality of the westward rush

and the following of the Oregon Trail.

 

--

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Written by
warren-gossett
American
Published
Nov 26, 2011
Lines·Words
33·196
Permission

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