Traveling Poetry

And now, a little Tom Waits for the traveler. Anyone got chords? I think I need to learn to play this.

Foreign Affair

when traveling abroad in the continental style
it’s my belief one must attempt to be discreet
and subsequently bear in mind your transient position
allows you a perspective that’s unique

though you’ll find your itinerary’s a blessing and a curse
your wanderlust won’t let you settle down
and you’ll wonder how you ever fathomed that you’d be content
to stay within the city limits of a small midwestern town

most vagabonds i knowed don’t ever want to find the culprit
that remains the object of their long relentless quest
the obsession’s in the chasing and not the apprehending
the pursuit you see and never the arrest

without fear of contradiction bon voyage is always hollered
in conjunction with a handkerchief from shore
by a girl that drives a rambler and furthermore
is overly concerned that she won’t see him anymore

planes and trains and boats and buses
characteristically evoke a common attitude of blue
unless you have a suitcase and a ticket and a passport
and the cargo that they’re carrying is you

a foreign affair juxtaposed with a stateside
and domestically approved romantic fancy
is mysteriously attractive due to circumstances knowing
it will only be parlayed into a memory

(Thanks, Lori.)

1 thought on “Traveling Poetry”

  1. Oooh, I think that would be hard. His phrasing is so distinct; it seems like you’d have to lose it to make it work on an instrument.

    In reverse of that, Loreena McKennit does a version of Greensleeves “as if sung by Tom Waits” that’s an interesting “double cover”– maybe if you un-Waits’ed this song, it would make a good instrumental.

    Reply

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