I sometimes search the Internet Looking for my father’s Rickenbacker guitar Though I rarely heard him play it That sliding sound, with my bedroom door ajar
More often I can see it still In our parlor in its dedicated space It must be strum while sitting down Its elevated strings silent in its case
I couldn’t comprehend it then Though looking back now it seems a little cruel That on the day my father died Like any other day, I went on to school
That day began as usual My father and I-an ordinary ride Until he swerved right off the road While I lurched to his side and watched while he died
His heart had stopped, and even now I try to remember a look or a trace Wondering why his lips turned blue And a wave of pale, deep pain was on his face
His death was never talked about I was clueless about what to do or say No one ever spoke to me then When I was driven to school on that same day
I can’t remember anything About the details of our lives before then I catch up watching family films He left when I was only 9, almost 10
I know we have gifts that differ I believe according to my Father’s Grace That the gift my father left me I sometimes see it written on my own face
And in strains of music heard That sliding, soulful sound in Hawaiian songs Or when Neil’s Harvest album plays I stop-and like a prayer I sing along
I looked for his guitar again It’s now worth so many thousand dollars more All I have is faded memories Haunting strains of music coming through my door
She might have needed 50 bucks When I asked it was the story she would tell About my dad’s Rickenbacker That I fiercely begged my mother not to sell
a repost of a poem from Bill's point of view; a story he told me over many years about his father's death. I was moved to write it after he told me how he was taken to school that day as if nothing had happened.