November '47, we left the big city

My folks and my brother, my sister and I

We lived in a basement, way out in a cornfield

Windows so small, you can just see the sky

Milk crates for chairs, and orange crates for cupboards

Concrete-block walls, they never got warm

We read by a kerosene lantern that winter

And Daddy told stories of home and the farm.

The twins came in April, and mother was tired

So much to do, nowhere to begin

Mud all around us and four rooms so crowded

That was the spring that the trees were put in

Elm trees and poplar, birches and cherry

Flowering crab apple and maple and pine

They were 3 or 4 feet tall, and thick as your finger

We pounded in stakes and we tied them with twine

Daddy, just look at those trees that you planted

Here's a chair for you, Mother, come sit in the shade

It's 30 years later, the children have scattered

But we'll always give thanks for the life that you made.

Those trees looked so tiny from my bedroom window

Money was scarce with six children so small

How I longed to be wealthy, and live in a mansion

Surrounded by trees that were graceful and tall

But the years have gone by, and now I can see it

How precious those days of sweet memories

I think of the cornfield, the house, and the people

And I love to go by and just look at the trees.

CHORUS