Story Behind The Song
This poem is based on the fact that every year in Baltimore, on Edgar Akkab Oie's Birthday, someone appears at his tombstone and leaves 3 roses and a flask of cognac there. No one has ever seen this mysterious person or knows who they might be, but some
Song Length |
4:29 |
Genre |
Spoken Word - Poetry, Unique - Unclassified |
Lyrics
There called on me one winters day,
at my chateau, near Poitiers,
just south of Paris, I call home,
a stranger with the strangest way--
she dressed the weather, freezing cold
and dark as night and cuffs all rolled;
so dressed was she I couldn't know
if she were young, or almost old.
But what she'd come from Baltimore
to my chateau, to see me for,
was but to hire me and my time--
to solve a puzzle, she implore!
Explained she of a cherished one
though many years he dead and gone,
she called each year, the day he borned
to shed some tears there at his stone--
and furthermore, she told me then,
when she arrive, someone has been
already there, and let to lay
three roses and cognac for him.
So what was then her mystery--
became the same for she and me,
to name the stranger--or to live
in darkness for eternity!
I had but only 3 days for
to make my way to Baltimore,
so flew from Orly to New York--
then rode the train down eastern shore.
And January's cold held fast
the winter set as winters past--
as blowed the snow into my face
I bowed down to his stone at last!
So strange the haunting I did feel,
there at his likeness, almost real,
seemed grasping me in bitter cold
to chill my soul, where I did kneel--
and suddenly a voice I hear
just whispering into my ear--
"you'll know the secret nevermore!"
Who told those words was not so clear--
but standing was a lady fair
just at my side--almost not there!
and when I begged she tell her name--
she disappeared--into nowhere!
The morrow was the day to be,
so planned I one cold night for me,
to stroll about and find the soul
who made us our great mystery.
Observed I then just ev'ryone
who came to see, and then was gone;
but never once did one appear
whom I could pin the deed upon!
And watched I all the night! I be
obsessed with being there, to see
just who would leave some spirits there
and join it with the roses three!
And walked I in a dreaming state,
about the cold I grew to hate,
I must have dozed as strolling there
or mesmerized by hands of fate!
And when I jolted fast awake
at mornings light, there no mistake,
the roses three were laying there
just at his stone, my breath it take!
And quick I spied around of me
my heart but beating, just to see
the face of who had passed me there,
but not a soul was there to be!
And now I sit at my chateau
to ponder on, but never know
who brought those spirits and then leave
so faint I never saw them go!
The mystery--in Baltimore--
is what a mystery is for--
to think upon, with passing time,
and it shall be, forevermore.!