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Am I Still The Pastor's Daughter?
Yellow bricks standing out standing tall
The crumbly old church building downtown
Stained glass windows glow purple and green
It holds one hundred years worth of memories
The crumbly old church building downtown
It’s become my second home
It holds one hundred years worth of memories
I have invested nearly a third of my life there
It’s become my second home
I am the preacher’s daughter
I have invested nearly a third of my life there
Sermons, potlucks, chores, and naps in Dad’s office
I am the preacher’s daughter
My title is fading away or maybe just changing
Sermons, potlucks, chores, and naps in Dad’s office
Endangered by the “For Sale” sign in the grass
My title is fading away or maybe just changing
The normality of my life is slipping
Endangered by the “For Sale” sign in the grass
We are beginning a Christian experiment
The normality of my life is slipping
A rented space replaces the rock solid building
We are beginning a Christian experiment
We will see where this road takes us
A rented space replaces the rock solid building
Stained glass windows glow purple and green
We will see where this road takes us
Yellow bricks standing out standing tall
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This poem is a pantoum, which means that the 2nd and 4th line of a stanza are also the 1st and 3rd lines of the next stanza.