Thursday, November 15, 2012

The Farmer's Wife


 

Such a thick-skinned orange

it was unreal -

So small a fruit

with such a peel.

 

Hanging so quiet

bright orange and round -

till season's end

when it hit the ground.

 

It rolled down hill

to a small shady spot

where others had -

though some had not.

 

It bounced off rocks

as it did go -

it rolled up to the Farmer's toe.

 

Such a thick-skinned orange

at last report

bumped into vodka -

and became a snort.

 
The Farmer's Wife
 
The Farmer's Wife
had made a pie -
gathered the cows -
and milked em' dry.
 
The Farmer's Wife
with her unshaved legs -
had rousted the Chickens
and collected the eggs.
 
The Farmer's Wife
out in the dirt -
had sewn a tear
in the scarecrow's shirt.
 
She had mended the fence
before 'twas noon -
and had harvested crops -
by the middle of June.
 
She stirred and she cooked
by the wood-burning stove -
for the Farmer who worked
in the old orange grove.
 
The Farmer's Neighbor
had a bull named  Rose -
horns of steel,
and a ring in his nose.
 
An ornery cuss
known far and wide -
had the farmer's neighbor's
brand on its hide.
 
He had busted the fence
and kicked up the dirt -
he tore a big hole
in the scarecrow's shirt.
 
He'd have done a lot more
before he was through -
but the farmer's wife
turned him to Stew.
 
He's now just a legend
around the wood-burning stove -
and a faint memory
in the old orange grove.
 
The Farmer and the Cell Phone
 
He rode upon the tractor
a little farmer's song he'd sing -
not much of a distracter -
came this tiny little ring,
 
She was calling from the farmhouse
to say the stew was in the pot -
the farmer's neighbor in the field
but the neighbor's bull was not.
 
Rows of lettuce to his right
beets and chives were tended -
chickens cooped, cows were milked
the fences all were mended.
 
His tractor glistened in the Sun
as clods of dirt were flung -
he plowed and drove the tidy rows
while his little cell phone rung.
 
Tomorrow he would paint the barn
a job he had put off -
He'd bail the hay, haul it in
and toss it in the loft,
 
Wednesday he might go to town
look up that city jerk -
who sold his wife these little phones
that never seem to work,
 
but for now he would be turning back
park the tractor by the stalls -
as the farmer and his cell phone did
whenever Nature called.
 
The Story of Thorn
 
Old Thorn he was the farmer's dog
They were pals, why don't ya know -
He'd run and bark, n' dig up seeds -
the farmer's wife would sew.
 
He'd grab an orange from the grove
and jump and run, as if to say -
"Catch me, catch me, if you can."
How Thorn did love to play,
 
The farmer and the farmer's wife
off to buy a phone -
took the truck and drove to town
they left old Thorn alone,
 
With no one left at home to play
or so the story goes -
he crept up soft and from behind
took quite a nip at Rose,
 
The startled bull did jump and kick
apart the fence there came -
he charged the lonely scarecrow
'twas who he saw to blame,
 
Now no one's ever known the truth
just me and Thorn and you -
and Thorn, well he ain't talking
about the Rose that turned to Stew.
 
 
 

1 comment:

Pauline said...

Totally Awesome!! It reminded me of some of the Cowboy Poetry I read and the books I have. I love it!! Poor Rose......................Yum!