This is a a real piece of Americana; the gist of it is learning about the old saying: 'Wherever you go, there you are' in spite of the crazy thing he's seen (hitchiking, I think).
The narrator could have been Gram himself, as opposed to an oblique 'persona', especially in the last verse: Notice that right after "Cheyenne to Tennessee', he meets up with 'the king', who wears an 'amphetamine crown' and talks about 'unbuckling that old bible belt'.
This is a a real piece of Americana; the gist of it is learning about the old saying: 'Wherever you go, there you are' in spite of the crazy thing he's seen (hitchiking, I think).
The narrator could have been Gram himself, as opposed to an oblique 'persona', especially in the last verse: Notice that right after "Cheyenne to Tennessee', he meets up with 'the king', who wears an 'amphetamine crown' and talks about 'unbuckling that old bible belt'.
Elvis????