*

*
Anywhere I go, the songs follow me.
The man was a giant to my five-year-old eyes.
Tall and skinny, with a long-neck banjo
he threw his head back and sang,
hopped like a cricket around the stage.
*
Camp songs carried his imprint.
We told Aunt Rhody
her goose was dead. The Midnight
special kept shining its light.
While he was blacklisted,
his songs rang like the hammer.
*
And then it was all about
overcoming, and equality
and bringing ‘em home
from Vietnam. We were
singing. I taught his songs
to the next generation.
*
How we all came together
on the river, once sewer water,
then a swimming pool.
The songs sailed up and down
the Hudson, sailing on into
choruses while he swapped songs
by the Sloop Club’s wood stove.
*
Handing down clothes to his
granddaughter, visits to
the log cabin above the river,
cowering under Toshi’s gimlet eye
her sharp words, no nonsense
for her who managed it all.
*
The song of a man threaded music
in silver strands through my living days,
the score of a life of giving
a shining pattern of humility and power.