These Soft Eyed Souls

When I pull open the barn doors,
every morning
and each evening,
as my grandparents did
one hundred years ago,
six rumbling voices
rise in greeting.
We exchange scents,
nuzzle each others’ ears.

I do my chores faithfully
as my grandparents once did–
draw fresh water
into buckets,
wheel away
the pungent mess underfoot,
release an armful of summer
from the bale,
reach under heavy manes
to stroke silken necks.

I don’t depend
on our horses’ strength
and willingness to
don harness
to carry me to town
or move the logs
or till the soil
as my grandparents did.

Instead,
these soft eyed souls,
born on this farm
almost three long decades ago,
are simply grateful
for my constancy
morning and night
to serve their needs
until the day comes
they need no more.

I depend on them
to depend on me
to be there
to open the doors;
their low whispering welcome
gives voice
to the blessings of
living on a farm
ripe with rhythms and seasons,
as if today and tomorrow are
just like one hundred years ago.

13 thoughts on “These Soft Eyed Souls

  1. Such loving co-dependence and the sometimes unseen joy and peace of farming life.
    Oh, those eyes — never seen a breed with eyes and lashes quite like your family of Haflingers, Emily.
    Thank you for a photo treat and a peak inside the barn….

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I am touched.by your words. Beautiful. I am taking care of two soft-eyed souls, and as you wrote, depending on them to depend on me.

    Liked by 1 person

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