Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Whipper-In by Thomas Hardy
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The Whipper-In

    By Thomas Hardy



    My father was the whipper-in, -
    Is still if I'm not misled?
    And now I see, where the hedge is thin,
    A little spot of red;
    Surely it is my father
    Going to the kennel-shed!

    "I cursed and fought my father aye,
    And sailed to a foreign land;
    And feeling sorry, I'm back, to stay,
    Please God, as his helping hand.
    Surely it is my father
    Near where the kennels stand?"

    " True. Whipper-in he used to be
    For twenty years or more;
    And you did go away to sea
    As youths have done before.
    Yes, oddly enough that red there
    Is the very coat he wore.

    "But he he's dead; was thrown somehow,
    And gave his back a crick,
    And though that is his coat, 'tis now
    The scarecrow of a rick;
    You'll see when you get nearer -
    'Tis spread out on a stick.

    "You see, when all had settled down
    Your mother's things were sold,
    And she went back to her own town,
    And the coat, ate out with mould,
    Is now used by the farmer
    For scaring, as 'tis old."



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