At 82, he rises early, hurries to the barn As fast as he can go, and at his age, The shambling gait looks like a run.
"Retire?" I asked just once. "Die in my boots," said he, "Or hanging in a fence."
"Vacation?" his foolish son inquired. "Each morning standing at the gate, To see the sunrise is my vacation!" his reply.
"Rest?" I still must ask. "I'll sleep when I am dead!" How many times I've heard this? I don't know.
I come, a tourist, to the farm I once called home, The place he never left...will never leave. Some day we'll find him, hanging in a fence, Or stuck and cold in a snowy ditch, Out on the fields or pastures that he loves.
No matter that my mother waits as always, Looking out at distances, At some late hour, Wondering where her man is, and Holding dinner warming on the stove.