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.
(Henry Lawson)
More Poetry from Henry Lawson:
Henry Lawson Poems based on Topics: Man, Smiling, Sign & Symbol, Silence- Ruth (Henry Lawson Poems)
- Mostly Slavonic (Henry Lawson Poems)
- With Dickens (Henry Lawson Poems)
- One Hundred and Three (Henry Lawson Poems)
- The Ballad of the Elder Son (Henry Lawson Poems)
- Brighten's Sister-In-Law [or The Carrier's Story] (Henry Lawson Poems)
Readers Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: Man Poems, Smiling Poems, Silence Poems, Sign & Symbol PoemsBased on Keywords: world-old, pints, father-in-law