Queen of Light took her bow
And then she turned to go,
The Prince of Peace embraced the gloom
And walked the night alone.

Oh, dance in the dark of night,
Sing to the morn-ing light.
The dark Lord rides in force tonight
And time will tell us all.

Oh, throw down your plow and hoe,
Rest not to lock your homes.
Side by side we wait the might
Of the darkest of them all.

I hear the horses' thunder
Down in the valley below,
I'm waiting for the angels of Avalon,
Waiting for the eastern glow.

The apples of the valley hold
The seeds of happiness,
The ground is rich from tender care,
Repay, do not forget, no, no.
Oh, dance in the dark of night,
Sing to the morning light.

The apples turn to brown and black,
The tyrant's face is red.

Oh the war is common cry,
Pick up you swords and fly.
The sky is filled with good and bad
That mortals never know.

Oh, well, the night is long
The beads of time pass slow,
Tired eyes on the sunrise,
Waiting for the eastern glow.

The pain of war cannot exceed
The woe of aftermath,
The drums will shake the castle wall,
The ringwraiths ride in black,
Ride on.

Sing as you raise your bow,
Shoot straighter than before.
No comfort has the fire at night
That lights the face so cold.

Oh dance in the dark of night,
Sing to the mornin' light.
The magic runes are writ in gold
To bring the balance back.
Bring it back.

At last the sun is shining,
The clouds of blue roll by,
With flames from the dragon of darkness
The sunlight blinds his eyes.






Alisa G. Stewart Crowe, 35, of Bowling Green died at 12:01 a.m. April 9, 2008, at The Medical Center. The Bowling Green native was born Oct. 20, 1972. She was a housewife, a homemaker and a Christian. She was a very kind and generous person who loved music and art. She had a great affinity for drums and was inspired by her favorite drummer, Jon Bonham. She was also a writer and loved the outdoors. She was a loving mother, wife, daughter, sister, granddaughter and friend and was very family-oriented. She was preceded in death by grandfathers, Burlin Jent and Mitchell Stewart. Funeral is at 2:30 p.m. Saturday at J.C. Kirby & Son Funeral Home, Broadway Avenue chapel, with burial in Bowling Green Gardens. Visitation is from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. Online condolences may be made at www.jckirbyandson.com. Survivors include her husband, Kevin Crowe; two sons, Jared and Ian Crowe, both of Bowling Green; parents, Belinda “Bluty” Jent of Bowling Green and James Ray Stewart and his wife, Bonnie, of Tompkinsville; grandmothers, Juanita Jent of Bowling Green and Madge Stewart of Tompkinsville; four brothers, Joshua and Jason Miller of Bowling Green and Brad and Scott Stewart of Tompkinsville; several aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews; a mother-in-law, Sheila Crowe of Bowling Green; and a father-in-law, Mike Crowe of Elizabethtown