Ol Betsy
I went down to the barn
one day
with my good five gallon pail.
I sat down next to Betsy,
and she switched me with her tail.
She switched me once,
she switched me twice.
I tried to calm her down.
But when she switched me in the eye
I had to stand my ground.
So I went and got some
bailing twine.
And tied her tail up high.
And then I sat back on that stool
and began another try.
Id only pulled
a teat or two
before she tried again.
This time she took her left hind hoof
and kicked me in the shin.
Id had about all
that I could stand
The pain was just the most.
So I wrapped her leg in bailing twine
and tied it to a post.
I had better luck the
third time round,
the pail was a quarter full,
but then she took her right rear foot,
and kicked it like a bull.
The pail flew high across
the barn.
The milk trailed high and wide.
The roosters scattered with the hens,
and I sat there and cried.
I couldnt hit old
Betsy
she was my favorite cow.
But I had to think of some technique
to get that milk somehow.
The last piece of that
bailing twine
was all that I could do.
I tied her right leg as the left.
and she let out a Moo.
But when I finally sat
again
to try and milk some more,
she kicked me with her left front foot
and knocked me on the floor.
I held my breath and
thought some things
that cant be printed here.
And briefly I considered
trading Betsy for a steer.
Instead I picked up that
old stool
and walked around behind.
I was about to place it there
when chills ran up my spine.
I looked behind me at
the door;
my wife was standing there.
She had a look that werent too good,
in fact it was a glare.
Now years have passed
since Betsy died.
I dont remember how.
But Ive never been able to convince my wife,
I was only gonna milk that cow.
7-6-92
Note: This poem I wrote after someone sent me a joke with the same theme.