Song picture
Gran's Last Wish
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Australian Bush Poetry
ballads balladeer bush ballads bush poetry merv webster
Artist picture
Australian Bush Poet and Balladeer
The particular style of music I enjoy playing is The Australian Bush Ballad pick and strum style championed by Slim Dusty and Stan Coster. The ballad style of lyrics shares the culture and the characters of my country. I am a member of the Australian Bush Balladeers. http://bushballadeers.com.au/bushpoet.htm I am also a bush Poet and a member of The Australian Bush Poets Association who define bush poetry as rhyming verse with regular metre and true rhyme about Australia, its people, places, things and way of life. http://www.abpa.org.au/
Song Info
Genre
Podcasts Poetry
Charts
Peak #70
Peak in subgenre #22
Author
Merv Webster
Rights
Merv Webster
Uploaded
March 19, 2010
Track Files
MP3
MP3 3.5 MB 128 kbps 3:47
Story behind the song
Based on a true story and recited by my wife Chris.
Lyrics
GRAN’S LAST WISH Our Gran, that’s on my mother’s side, was British born and raised, until the age of ten it seems, then Gran was quite amazed to find her mum and dad had planned to emigrate for good, to Sydney in Australia and a brand new neighbourhood. My mum was born in Sydney and she married there as well and that is where she raised me, like, and by the way, I’m Nell. Last year old Gran was eighty-five and sensed her time was near, so planned on one last visit back to England late last year. She stayed there for three months or more with her dear cousin Em and e-mailed every Friday without fail ‘round 8 p.m. Then suddenly the e-mails stopped, we heard from her no more, till late last week the mailman dropped a package at our door. The stamps were clearly British, so it seemed that Gran was well, but when we saw the contents we were dumb-struck for a spell. Inside we found two packets that were labelled Heinz Leek Soup and that was all, no, nothing else, which stunned our family group. We figured … well it seems to us … Gran fancies this Leek brew and kindly sent a sample so that we could taste it too. Mum added just a dash of cream to thicken it no doubt, but after eating half of it we had to tip it out. It tasted flaming terrible and failed to see how Gran could recommend that soup from hell to all our Aussie clan. To our surprise the Postman dropped a letter by next day, again it was from England, so we read it straight away. It was a note from cousin Em and this is what she said: “Regret to have to tell you folk your dear old Gran is dead. She passed away last Tuesday, but before she breathed her last Gran told me her last wishes and so this is what has passed. “We didn’t want to burden you with debt and all the fuss of getting Gran back home you see, so it seemed clear to us, if we had Gran cremated we could send her home to you and save the legal rigmarole most other folk go through. “We placed Gran in the soup packets, but in the rush I’d say, forgot to put this letter in, though sent it off next day. My heart goes out to all of you - your Gran was such a gem. And please forgive the mix-up folks. Yours truly. Cousin Em.”
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