Gentle on My Mind

Jim Ed Brown and the Browns · Country's Best on Record [RCA Victor] [1968]

(John Hartford)



It's just knowing that your door is always open

And your path is free to walk

That makes me tend to leave my sleeping bag rolled up

And stashed behind your couch.



And it's knowing I'm not shackeled by forgotten words and bons

And the ink stains that have dried upon some line

That keeps you in the back roads by the rivers of my mem'ry

That keeps you ever gentle on my mind.



It's not clinging to the rocks and

I'd be planted on their columns now that binds me

Or something that somebody said

Because they thought we fit together walking.



It's just knowing that the world will not be cursing or forgivin'

When I walk along some railroad track and find

That you're movin' on the back roads by the rivers of my mem'ry

And for hours you're just gentle on my mind.



Though the wheet fields and the clothes lines

And the junk yards and the highways come between us

And some other woman cryin' to her mother

'Cause she turned and I was gone.



I still might run in silence tears of joy might stain my face

And the summer sun might burn me till I'm blind

But not to where I cannot see you walking on the back roads

By the rivers flowin' gentle on my mind.



I dipped my cup of soap back

From a gurgling crackling caltron in some train yard

My beard a roughen coal pile and a dirty hat

Pulled low across my face.



Through cupped hands round a tin can

I pretend I hold you to my breast and find

That you're waving from the back roads by the rivers of my mem'ry

Ever smiling ever gentle on my mind...