The Music In The Woods

Joe Grant

The workshop has been quiet now for nigh-on eighty years

It's been that long since loving hands brought music forth from wood in here

Golden-red and caked with rosin dust stands his life's work on the shelf

Old Sam who always heard, "You should be building something else!"



A carriage-maker was his trade and he could do it fairly well

But whether it was timely done happened as his moods they rose and fell

He'd stop with half the wheeling done and to his finer tools he'd turn

To cut and shape and coax the wood to sing the song he heard



Chorus

Put your hands to the wood

Touch the music put there by the summer sun and wind

The rhythms of the rain, locked within the rings

And let your fingers find The Music in the Wood



With the shop knee-deep in shavings and a carriage scarce begun

His wife would find old Sam at work on a fiddle that was nearly done

"Oh, Sam!", she cried, "Will I have to pay the mortgage by myself?

We don't need one more violin, you should be building something else!"



So he'd turn back to his trade once more

Until his kids came home

And asked him to go walking and to the forest they would go

"When you know each tree and flower," said Sam

"And the song of every bird, I'll build you each a fiddle

And we'll bring music from the wood"



Chorus



Old Sam was no provider; his few carriages are gone

But the fiddles made for naught but love

Preserve the wood and still sing its song

And while some men heard the call to gain a carriage-builder's wealth

Another voice told Sam, "You should be building something else!"



Chorus