"South December
Road"
Written
by: George Green/Dave Robbins
That old brown house
is haunted
said the young boys
in the road
who threw stones through
faceless windows
as the sky filled up
with snow
I watched them from
a taxi
And the driver said
of course
That one time late
at night he'd seen
a young girl on the
porch
And it must have been
a ghost he laughed
I shivered in the cold
and the snowflakes
fell like ancient tears
on South December Road
Something in my heart
remembered
long forgotten sins
as they echo through
those empty rooms
and scatter in the
wind
There's a branch that's
barely hangin
from a dying chestnut
tree
and it sways before
the window where
your bedroom used to
be
And I drove the old
man's Plymouth
through the tired Midwestern
snow
and you met me on the
corner down
on South December Road
Now that drug store
up on Main Street
has that sign above
the door
they've been satisfying
customers
since 1934
We drank cherry flavored
cola's there
when we were seventeen
but that soda fountain's
gone now
so a bought a magazine
And I walked down toward
the graveyard
as the wind began to
blow
and I stumbled across
the headstone
nearly buried in the
snow
And your face filled
up my memory
and a phantom filled
my soul
like the cracks that
filled the sidewalk down
on South December Road