I celebrate this journey in the desert - I am but a traveler in my time: in this pasture of my fathers, land, where stands this miracle of glass now calling manna down from the high home of eagles: I am but a helpless everyman, lost in the desert, on a journey out from the clutches of misery, and pain; The world is making progress. As I see the oases running farther away from my sights: on elevators to the skies, numbers of the young call on benefactors across the seas, for a ropeway across the quagmires: a home, a car and the family life; saving for a better day, in the future, while my home went from mudbrick to thatched grass, then out on streets by the gutter with the dogs; I am a cleaner, cobbler, janitor in the land where I was the tiller. Wiping the sweat on my brows as I loaf on the lawns, awaiting labour days hyphenated by mealtimes, there is no witch-doctor now, and no money to pay up at the hospitals that the wealthy from afar line up to, but to die helpless a wretched death, I celebrate my helplessness!
This is the start of my own epic poem, themed after Walt Wiltman's lifesong!