Grandma has no grave In my house. Ashes are her remains Underneath the ground.
I saw it, once, a hand-sized metal disk With holes as big as a one-pence coin For plastic flowers of various faded colours and dull varieties By which to shed a tear and moan That what little she had is now overgrown.
Between you and me, though, she's buried somewhere deep In Albox, Spain, in a citrus heat Where her tree grows steady, bearing good fruit Year after year blooming flowers of white Strong white, bright white All the same kind. Her tree puts forth oranges of sweetness and pride Not dimmed in all this time since the moment she died, Though she's been moved, once or twice, Her flowers still bloom Sweet, strong, and bright.