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Roy "Shorty" , Minnie, Bill and
Sherman "Red" Freeman
Cadiz, Kentucky
about 1927
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"Miss Minnie" Freeman,
Betty Jane Freeman, and Jacquetta
Freeman
East End Cemetery
Cadiz, Kentucky
February 1941
Miss Minnie
A Lady of Means
If ever you had known her -
Miss Minnie, a lady of means,
You'd guess she had no money,
Just lots of hopes and dreams.
Nice days she'd sit in her swing,
Needles and thread in her hands,
Knitting things for needy folks,
In far and distant lands.
She offered others help and home,
Set a table fit for a king.
She could straighten the house
in no time,
Then go sit on the porch in
the swing.
She put her heart in all she
did,
Never asking anything in return.
Loved little children; they
made her smile.
Treated all with kindness and
concern.
Miss Minnie, a small woman of
statue,
What she lacked she made up
with her ways,
Of making you feel welcome and
loved,
You'd remember her all of your
days.
Her dress front was slightly
padded,
It was important to look her
best.
A tiny bun on her head, always
neat,
And manners that passed any
test.
As days, then years began to
fly,
She sat more in her swing.
Such a lovely place of pillows
and lace,
She'd crochet as she heard the
birds sing.
The front porch was her haven.
Her eyes viewed pastoral scenes,
Of cows and lanes and watering
ponds,
Miss Minnie was a lady of means.
One day, we heard, Miss Minnie
was gone!
Oh, the day came 'way too soon.
That front porch is so empty
now,
As the birds all sing out of
tune.
No pillows and lace nor even
the swing,
Just a porch, as all porches
go
But in my mind I can still she
her there,
As she knits and hums real low.
I know that she went to heaven
That's where I want to go
To see Miss Minnie, once again
To see her large halo glow
Some nights I dream about her
And always in those dreams
She's swinging high in heaven
Miss Minnie, a lady of means.
Jean Clark~~ ©
July 30, 2001
ELMIRA MINNIE COTHRAN was my great aunt. She was a fantastic woman! |