In a graveyard with the dead

Lies two graves

A couple, newly married

Together many weathers they brave

Muggles don't know whom these graves

Belong

None mentioned in any poem nor

Song

Sometimes they look put the window

And spot

One boy placing flowers upon

But from many he is forgot

"Freak" they shout

To his many changing hairstyles

They then laugh at the flowers he places

They sneer at his ever-present pout

But then they see

A man with this boy

A lightning scar upon his forehead

In his present they are coyer

This odd couple leave

And the muggles approach the two graves standing

Side-by-side

And engraved upon these pillars of stone:

Nymphadora Tonks-Lupin

1973-1998

Loving mother, persistent wife, beloved daughter

Valuable Auror, charmingMetamorphmagus

'Don't call me Nymphadora!"

Remus Lupin

1960-1998

Loving Father, Adored Husband, Beloved Friend

Charming Werewolf, Intellectual Professor

"There is no doubt at all in my mind that his death would be proclaimed as widely as possible by the Death Eaters if it had happened, because it would strike a deadly blow at the morale of those resisting the new regime. 'The Boy Who Lived' remains a symbol of everything for which we are fighting: the triumph of good, the power of innocence, the need to keep resisting."

And those muggles looked upon those two graves

Standing side by side

Two parents killed by The Dark Lords slaves

Together in marriage, death and when they died