The Long Steel Road

Josephine Spencer

The long, steel road, like a silver thread
Crosses the stretch of the desert bed;
Through sage-sewn miles of burning sand
It spreads a sinuous, shining band,
And through its magic--time and space
Fade out in spells of whirlwind pace.

Across its path the lizards creep,
Roused from a long and listless sleep
To see in the shining track a sword
That threatens death to the useless horde
Of desert creatures that have held
The land in liege through time un-spelled.

Where snake and lizard breed and thrive,
Where scorpions in sand-dunes hive,
The steel road weaves a wizard charm
To still their taunts of death, or harm;
And where they fattened--herds shall low,
And emerald grasses wave and blow.

Along its way, fair spots, unknown
To human eye, through ages lone--
Unfold their beauties, borne anear
By the steel highway--charioteer
Of Destiny--to give the world
Treasures so long from vision furled.

Its tread wipes out the desert miles;
Bold peak to sloping sea-shore smiles;
Light craft that ply an inland sea
Signal old ocean's argosy,
And orange groves to Oquirrh fields
Trumpets the tie the steel road wields.

From Wasatch wall to harbor gate--
Its girdle, like a band of fate,
Links in an endless amity
Two cities, pledged by Destiny
To be twin comrades in a toil
That yet shall win the desert's soil
From age on age of sere repose
To bud, and blossom as the rose!

The Long steel road is the road across the Salt Lake City basin, from the Wasatch Range in the East to the Oquirrh mountains in the West.