(Mark Alan Springer/Jerry Laseter)
|
|
Your teacher might've told you it was five thousand something feet
|
That ain't to far in a car or on a city street
|
Let me tell you son, back where I come from
|
You learn as a little child
|
There ain't nothing any longer than a Louisiana country mile
|
|
Amos Walker said he'd shoot me next time he caught me crossing his fence
|
But I was too much in love to reallly think about it back then
|
Walking that tree cross Thibidioux creek
|
I can still see them gators smile
|
But she was worth every step of that Louisiana country mile
|
|
That path got shorter as I fell deeper
|
I'd swim that old swamp if I had to to see her
|
Those days are gone and she's a memory,
|
But when that road looks long it hits me
|
There's a treasure at the end of most of life's troubles and trials
|
And there ain't nothing longer than a Louisiana country mile
|
|
I've come a long way from that little house back in the woods
|
And I know I don't get back there as much as I should
|
But every now and then when the walls close in I can still smile
|
I close my eyes and let my mind walk that Louisiana country mile
|
|
That path got shorter as I fell deeper
|
I'd swim that old swamp if I had to to see her
|
Those days are gone and she's a memory,
|
But when that road looks long it hits me
|
There's a treasure at the end of most of life's troubles and trials
|
And there ain't nothing longer than a Louisiana country mile
|
Don't talk till you've walked that Louisiana country mile
|
|
-----------------
|
Louisiana Country Mile
|
David Kersh |