This was posted on another board. I forward it 
just as it was there, for your amusement:

As a bagpiper, I was asked by a funeral director to play 
at a graveside service for a homeless man who had no family 
or friends. The funeral was to be held at a cemetery in the 
remote countryside and this man would be the first to be 
laid to rest there.

As I was not familiar with the backwoods area, I became lost 
and, being a typical man, did not stop for directions. I 
finally arrived an hour late. I saw the backhoe and the 
crew who were eating lunch but the hearse was nowhere in 
sight. I apologized to the workers for my tardiness and 
stepped to the side of the open grave where I saw the 
vault lid already in place.

I assured the workers I would not hold them up for long but 
this was the proper thing to do. The workers gathered around, 
still eating their lunch. I played out my heart and soul.
As I played the workers began to weep. I played and I played 
like I'd never played before, from Going Home and The Lord 
Is My Shepherd to Flowers of the Forest . I closed the 
lengthy session with Amazing Grace and walked to my car.

As I was opening the door and taking off my coat, I overheard 
one of the workers saying to another, "Sweet Jeezuz, Mary'n 
Joseph, I never seen nothin' like that before and I've been 
putting in septic tanks for twenty years."



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