Public Domain Poetry And Stories - My Father-In-Law And I by Henry Lawson
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My Father-In-Law And I

    By Henry Lawson



    My father-in-law is a careworn man,
    And a silent man is he;
    But he summons a smile as well as he can
    Whenever he meets with me.
    The sign we make with a silent shake
    That speaks of the days gone by,
    Like men who meet at a funeral,
    My father-in-law and I.

    My father-in-law is a sober man
    (And a virtuous man, I think);
    But we spare a shilling whenever we can,
    And we both drop in for a drink.
    Our pints they fill, and we say, “Ah, well!”
    With the sound of the world-old sigh,
    Like the drink that comes after a funeral,
    My father-in-law and I.

    My father-in-law is a kindly man,
    A domestic man is he.
    He tries to look cheerful as well as he can
    Whenever he meets with me.
    But we stand and think till the second drink
    In a silence that might imply
    That we’d both get over a funeral,
    My father-in-law and I.



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