I went out for a walk one day

and I saw a girl who was very sad.

She cried and she cried.

I asked her why but she wouldn’t say

and I looked down;

daisies grew in the grass at my feet.

I plucked one and smiled.

I gave her the flower.

 

I took my dog for a walk the next day

and I saw her again.

Still crying, still sad.

I asked her why but she still wouldn’t say

and I looked up;

there were colors in the sky.

Colors of fire.

I stood on my tiptoes and took four or five.

Pink, yellow, orange.

A green, and a blue.

I smiled at the girl.

I gave her a rainbow.

 

Two days later

I took my new pony out for a ride.

We passed by the girl who was sad

in a meadow.

He's a pretty red pony.

I just got him too.

His mane and his tail are the color of butter

and the girl who was sad

she sobbed and she wailed;

I didn’t bother to ask this time.

She was blubbering, and all—

what else could I do–

I smiled at the girl.

I gave her my pony.

 

 It seemed right at the time

then a week or so passed and I saw her again;

she wailed and she sobbed and she cried even more,

and I thought of something I hadn’t before—

 

maybe for some people, sad is happy.

Some people, maybe, enjoy being sad.

 

The next time I went for a walk,

I saw her,

sobbing and wailing and bawlin’ away;

all those tears.

But I learned something from her.

 

She taught me a lesson without saying a word.

 

I smiled and I said to the girl who was sad,

the rainbow, the daisy,

keep ‘em, they’re yours—

 

but I want my goddamn pony back.