It’s known as Old Buncom Corner
A place where you’ve got to slow down;
A spot on the map where the mem’ries
Wander all over downtown.
Some say it’s just some old buildings
That should be politely destroyed,
To make way for more solid structures
That are more cost-effective employed.
Or possibly just tear it all down —
Buildings and trees and the shade,
And grind up the earth for more pasture
Through which cow/calf units wade.
Or maybe we straighten the roads out,
Less dangerous then, don’t you know!
We could drive at neck-breaking speed then
(and not at twenty below).
But, yet, some folks are a-wondering
Why don’t we let the ghosts talk?
Why don’t we repair the old buildings
And recapture the historical walk?
Rebuild the roofs and the sidings,
Restructure the walls and the trails,
And walk with the ghosts of Old Buncom
And repeat for one day the old mails.
And the why of the Indian doings
The why of the Passion D’ Ditch
That consumed the descendants of Phillips
And made Kleinhammer so rich.
And, why, in the shade of Old Buncom
When we see the old buildings in town,
We see miner and cowboy and farmer
And not just shades of wood brown.
And we’ll think of the past and the doings
Of commerce and mail-toting lines,
And the people who came and full-used them
‘Neath the shade of the gallant old pines.
Just maybe we’ll learn what we search for,
Just maybe we’ll know what we miss,
If we but just ken to the whispers
In those pine trees’ wind-driven kiss.