The Old Home By The Mill

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This is "The old Home by the Mill"--far we still call it so,
  Although the old mill, roof and sill, is all gone long ago.
  The old home, though, and old folks, and the old spring, and a few
  Old cat-tails, weeds and hartychokes, is left to welcome you!

  Here, Marg'et, fetch the man a tin to drink out of' Our spring
  Keeps kindo-sorto cavin' in, but don't "taste" anything!
  She's kindo agein', Marg'et is--"the old process," like me,
  All ham-stringed up with rheumatiz, and on in seventy-three.

  Jes' me and Marg'et lives alone here--like in long ago;
  The childern all put off and gone, and married, don't you know?
  One's millin' way out West somewhere; two other miller-boys
  In Minnyopolis they air; and one's in Illinoise.

  The oldest gyrl--the first that went--married and died right here;
  The next lives in Winn's Settlement--for purt' nigh thirty year!
  And youngest one--was allus far the old home here--but no!--
  Her man turns in and he packs her 'way off to Idyho!

  I don't miss them like _Marg'et_ does--'cause I got _her_, you see;
  And when she pines for them--that's 'cause _she's_ only jes' got
  _me_!
  I laugh, and joke her 'bout it all.--But talkin' sense, I'll say,
  When she was tuk so bad last Fall, I laughed the t'other way!

  I haint so favorble impressed 'bout dyin'; but ef I
  Found I was only second-best when _us two_ come to die,
  I'd 'dopt the "new process" in full, ef _Marg'et_ died, you see,--
  I'd jes' crawl in my grave and pull the green grass over me!

© James Whitcomb Riley