That night was cold and dry as we gathered in the park. Someone, I don’t know who, lit the first candle in the dark. The dark mass of the Dakota was ever in our view, as we joined to mourn John Lennon in small groups of ones and twos.
They kept us from the crime scene where John’s blood still stained the stones. He was gunned down by some lunatic who’d acted all alone. John was groaning, barely conscious, when Cops got him in their car He died there in the back seat before they’d gone too far.
I heard somebody singing, in a strong clear baritone, the lyrics of “Imagine”; John’s song that’s so well known. Other voices swelled the chorus, singing loud and long. What prayer could not accomplish we would try to do with song.
I went back to visit recently to show my children where Their Dad stood vigil in the park back when he had long hair. Strawberry Fields forever, the name they call this green, where greying fans still gather to sing, to mourn, to dream.
+The field in Central Park across from the Dakota was named "Strawberry Fields" on 10/09/85 which would have been John Lennon's 45th birthday