I ’ve journeyed ‘roun’
consid’able, a-seein’ men an’ things,
An’ I ‘ve learned a little
of the sense that meetin’ people brings;
But in spite of all my travelling an’
of all I think I know,
I ’ve got one notion in my head,
that I can’t git to go;
An’ it is that the folks I meet
in any other spot
Ain’t half so good as them I knowed
back home in Possum Trot.
I know you ’ve never heerd the name,
it ain’t a famous place,
An’ I reckon ef you ’d search
the map you could n’t find a trace
Of any sich locality as this I ’ve
named to you;
But never mind, I know the place, an’
I love it dearly too.
It don’t make no pretensions to
bein’ great or fine,
The circuses don’t come that way,
they ain’t no railroad line.
It ain’t no great big city, where
the schemers plan an’ plot,
But jest a little settlement, this place
called Possum Trot.
But don’t you think the folks that
lived in that outlandish place
Were ignorant of all the things that go
for sense or grace.
Why, there was Hannah Dyer, you may search
this teemin’ earth
An’ never find a sweeter girl, er
one o’ greater worth;
An’ Uncle Abner Williams, a-leanin’
on his staff,
It seems like I kin hear him talk, an’
hear his hearty laugh.
His heart was big an’ cheery as
a sunny acre lot,
Why, that’s the kind o’ folks
we had down there at Possum Trot.
Good times? Well, now, to suit my
taste,—an’ I ’m some hard to
suit,—
There ain’t been no sich pleasure
sence, an’ won’t be none to boot,
With huskin’ bees in Harvest time,
an’ dances later on,
An’ singin’ school, an taffy
pulls, an’ fun from night till dawn.
Revivals come in winter time, baptizin’s
in the spring,
You ‘d ought to seen those people
shout, an’ heerd ’em pray an’ sing;
You ’d ought to ‘ve heard
ole Parson Brown a-throwin’ gospel shot
Among the saints an’ sinners in
the days of Possum Trot.
We live up in the city now, my wife was
bound to come;
I hear aroun’ me day by day the
endless stir an’ hum.
I reckon that it done me good, an’
yet it done me harm,
That oil was found so plentiful down there
on my ole farm.
We ’ve got a new-styled preacher,
our church is new-styled too,
An’ I ’ve come down from what
I knowed to rent a cushioned pew.
But often when I ‘m settin’
there, it’s foolish, like as not,
To think of them ol’ benches in
the church at Possum Trot.
I know that I ‘m ungrateful, an’
sich thoughts must be a sin,
But I find myself a wishin’ that
the times was back agin.
With the huskin’s an’ the
frolics, an’ the joys’ I used to know,
When I lived at the settlement, a dozen
years ago.
I don’t feel this way often, I ’m
scarcely ever glum,
For life has taught me how to take her
chances as they come.
But now an’ then my mind goes back
to that ol’ buryin’ plot,
That holds the dust of some I loved, down
there at Possum Trot.