HONOR ROLL 

PILOT's LAST CALL Author Unknown
I hope there's a place way up in the sky, where pilots can go the day that they die
A place where a guy can buy a cold beer, for a friend or a comrade, whose memory is dear
A place no doctor or lawyer can tread, nor the FAA type would e'er be caught dead
Just a quaint little place, dark, full of smoke, where patrons sing loud, and love a good joke
The kind of place a lady could go, and feel safe and protected by the men she would know
There must be this place where old pilots go, when their flying is finished, and their airspeed gets low
Where the whiskey is old, and the women are young, where songs about flying and dying are sung
Where you see all the fellows who'd flown here before, who call out your name, as you came through the door
Who would buy you a drink, if your thirst should be bad, and relate to others, "He was a good lad"
And then through the mist, you'd spot this old guy, you hadn't seen in years, though he taught you to fly
He'd nod his old head, and grin ear to ear, And say, "Welcome, home son, I'm pleased that you're here"
For this is the place where true flyers come, when their journey is over, and their war has been won
Here they feel safe and just like at home, away from the pundit, the bureaucrat, the management clone,
Where all hours are happy, enjoying a cold one, maybe deal from a deck, this is heaven my son, You've passed your last check ! |