Her withered old face died into a long shiny coffin
We stood and watched in amazement as they took her from the North Dakota coal black hearse.
We listened in obedient silence as mourners sang “The Old Rugged Cross”
In that clearing surrounded by tall weeping firs
That soundless graveyard where nothing ever exploded into smiles
Where grave markers were made of wood too old to read forever
Men in dark suits, solemn looking old friends of the star in the casket
Stood lost in thoughts of days when they all laughed and when they would all die
We all were scared, we children standing small in the shadow of our folks
Listening to the birds in the forest dark and near, not hearing the preacher’s mumblings
We didn’t understand any of the words until they stopped, then our minds were jerked
From our own thoughts, more songs were sung, we listened — afraid
The group moved closer to the freshly dug hole, her coffin lowered
The fresh earth like a garden, its scent of potatoes and plowing was piled nearby
The diggers stood off leaning on their shovels, smoking, talking lowly
Their old pick-up dirty and loaded with peat moss and rakes was parked near by
Soon somebody prayed for something then we all left walking near mounded
And sunken graves, we got into our old blue Ford feeling small and disturbed, mother cried
We drove out the dusty road between chiseled stones and wilted flowers
And through the back window and flying dust the diggers threw dirt on the ceremony.
Douglas Granum
I was married to a close family friend of “Dougie” as my wife Judy Davis called him. She would have been pleased to learn of his success.