This is my great niece. She's just two months old. I don't think her folks will mind if I post her picture, Ash has been posting pictures like crazy since the kid was born. I posted this entry two years ago. I look at this little face and this song scares me to death.
WHOSE GARDEN WAS THIS
Whose garden was this, it must
have been lovely.
Did it have flowers?
I've seen pictures of flowers.
And I'd love to have smelled one.
Did it have flowers?
I've seen pictures of flowers.
And I'd love to have smelled one.
Whose river was this, you say it
ran freely.
Blue was its color.
And I've seen blue in some pictures.
And I'd love to have been there.
Blue was its color.
And I've seen blue in some pictures.
And I'd love to have been there.
Tell me again I need to know.
The forest had trees, the meadows were green.
The oceans were blue and birds really flew.
Can you swear that it's true.
Whose grey sky was this?
The forest had trees, the meadows were green.
The oceans were blue and birds really flew.
Can you swear that it's true.
Whose grey sky was this?
Or was it a blue one?
You say there were breezes.
I've heard records of breezes.
And I'd love to have felt one.
You say there were breezes.
I've heard records of breezes.
And I'd love to have felt one.
Tell me again I need to know.
The forest had trees, the meadows were green.
The oceans were blue and birds really flew.
Can you swear that it's true.
Whose garden was this, it must have been lovely.
Did it have flowers?
I've seen pictures of flowers.
And I'd love to have smelled one.
The forest had trees, the meadows were green.
The oceans were blue and birds really flew.
Can you swear that it's true.
Whose garden was this, it must have been lovely.
Did it have flowers?
I've seen pictures of flowers.
And I'd love to have smelled one.
Tell me again I need to know.
Tell me again I need to know.
Tell me again I need to know.
Tell me again I need to know.
Tell me again I need to know.
Tell me again I need to know.
Tell me again I need to know.
Words and music by Tom Paxton. Covered
by John Denver about 1970
I don’t really know what to make
of these lyrics. But listening John Denver sing this song is enough to break
your heart.
Is this a nightmare of now or
the far future? God/dess knows we have enough nightmares in our own time. The
dates suggest the song is pre EPA era. And here we have a concerted effort to
gut the EPA. Supposedly this will create jobs. I’ve even run across comments
that take the stand that given a choice between jobs and the environment, the
environment comes dead last. And you can’t get through to them. If we destroy
the environment the jobs aren’t going to matter very much.
So, what is the world in this
song? Is it the remains a jungle in Viet Nam after Agent Orange was
dropped on it? The remains of an equatorial rainforest? The spreading of the Sahara ? The wrecked neighborhoods in the Bronx and Brooklyn ?
Or is this a nightmare out of
the finale of Soylant Green or the novel Stand on Zanzibar? A future when
flowers, trees, blue skies, free flowing rivers, unspoiled oceans, and even
birds are remembered in pictures and folk tale? Something your doddering great
grandparents tell stories about? “I’ve seen pictures of flowers. And I’d loved
to have smelled one.”
Goddess, may it never come to
that.
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