That last day they fled to the beach
This did not feel like goodbyeThough she had watched him carefullyWrap his good ochre-colored shoes in newsprint,Place them in a borrowed valise.There was no room for her picture.Grampa cried, tears jeweling From his old reddened eyes which had seen everything
Except this day.Sixty, seventy, eighty miles an hour they spedAlong that gravelled road to the beachThe dated letter between them like a nasty thief,Promise to a country lost somewhere betweenThe stock market and world wars.Her camera clicked out segments of time,Captured the heat of that last day in MayAs hostile little waves slapped the mean shoreAnd the steady drone of insects filled saffron air.They had no crumbs for hungry birds that hovered nearAnd the unforgiving sun moved too quickly toward theHorizon.There were hugs and promises for everyone before
She walked out on the wide muskegAnother fragment of this planet, empty,
aloneLifting her face to watchHis jet circle between mountainsShrinking in spaceNow a small silver coinIn her blue window of heaven.
"Silver Coin" © 2001 Connie Tonsgard
My big boy ~ Jeff Beck ~ made this song -- sings and plays it by himself. I love it so much.
Find the Great Singer!