No one ached when I died On a dusty August morning in the swelter of the sun They buried me in blue jeans and my coffin had a crack A chip along the edges matched the blood along the tracks
Family preceded me; there was no one left to cry But a single solemn woman, hidden in the back Shed a single shiny tear; and only one to be exact
No waterfalls or bowing heads, no crowd to see me go No burning candle vigils and no midnight serenade I marched the gates of life and death, alone but unafraid
No one ached when I died No questions or suspicions from the folks around the town There were no weeping faces or a grand old death parade Just a digger and a preacher; lowered slowly in the grave