Big MackA Poem by David Lewis PagetI
have always been a trucker I
was raised on diesel fumes, And
I smoked two packs of Lucky’s From
daybreak to afternoons, While
I ate at roadside diners From
a plate that swam in grease, And
I downed two mugs of coffees In
my cab, the one I leased. My
Big Mack, my eighteen-wheeler I
once drove through western plains, Then
I hauled hogs out of Denver And
I shuttled freight to Maine, And
I kept my eyes wide open As
I popped those purple hearts, I
could feel my heart keep pounding As
I rolled beneath the stars. It’s
a great and grand old country From
New York to Idaho, From
the Rockies to Vancouver And
then down to Mexico, And
I’ve seen Tornado Alley With
a twister coming down, And
then through Louisiana Where
I’ve stopped, and gone to ground. I
was hauling hogs to Houston Eighteen
hours on the clock, I
was five hours past the limit so I
couldn’t fill my Log, And
the Bears were getting hairy On
the highway, going down, I
was too much in a hurry, Took
the rig the back way round. It
was getting on for midnight And
the night was more than black As
I found the off-road highway was Just
nothing but a track, There
were headlights in the distance So
I pulled off to the side, Thought
I’d wait for them to pass me On
that long and lonely ride. But
the lights approached me slowly And
they pinned me in their beam, As
I squinted through the darkness Not
believing what I’d seen, So
I flicked the headlights up again To
see what they revealed, And
it struck me like a pickaxe That
this ‘truck’, it had no wheels! I
sat frozen in my cabin As
this thing began to glow, And
it raised itself above me Lit
me up there, down below, Then
the eighteen-wheeler lifted And
without the slightest sound, I
was up there in the darkness In
the air, and looking down. It
could well have been a twister Picked
me up and flung me round, I
have seen whole trucks in twisters Lifted
up, clean off the ground, But
this thing that was above me Took
me on some drunken ride, Skimming
trees and fertile pastures Shallow
lakes and mountainsides. It
was some hallucination From
the pills I’d popped that day, It
was my imagination Well
I thought so, anyway; But
the cabin door flew open And
I leant out, looking down, This
was no imagination, I
was miles above the ground. I
slammed the door and took a slug Of
bourbon, of Jim Beam That
I’d hidden in the cabin, All
it did was make me dream, With
the pills, it must have hit me As
I crashed out in the cab, And
I didn’t wake ‘til morning Frozen
stiff, and feeling drab. The
Mack sat to its axles in A
field of pearl white snow, A
farmer looking up at me, And
willing me to go, I
asked him where I was, and then I
phoned the base, back home: ‘He
said that I’m in Greenland! Yeah!
God-d****t! - Who would know?’ I
smoke three packs of Lucky’s Sometimes
four, it all depends, On
whether I’ve passed out on Beam, I’m
not one to pretend, I
shudder when I see a rig That
night is with me still, I
never drive at night, and hey! I
bet I never will! David
Lewis Paget © 2012 David Lewis PagetAuthor's Note
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Added on August 26, 2012Last Updated on August 26, 2012 Tags: trucker, Houston, headlights, snow Author
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