Grandma and the Family Tree
There's been a change in Grandma, we've noticed her of late,
She's always
reading history or jotting down some date.
She's tracking back the family, we'll
all have pedigrees.
Oh, Grandma's got a hobby, she's climbing Family Trees.
Poor Grandpa does the cooking and now, or so he states,
That worst of all,
he has to wash the cups and dinner plates.
Grandma can't be bothered, she's busy
as a bee
Compiling genealogy - for the Family Tree.
She has no time
to baby-sit, the curtains are a fright,
No buttons left on Grandad's shirt, the
flower bed's a sight.
She's given up her club work, the serials on TV,
The
only thing she does nowadays is climb the Family Tree.
She goes down to
the courthouse and studies ancient lore,
We know more about our forebears than
we ever knew before.
The books are old and dusty, they make poor Grandma sneeze,
A minor irritation when you're climbing Family Trees.
The mail is all for
Grandma, it comes from near and far,
Last week she got the proof she needs to
join the DAR.
A worthwhile avocation, to that we all agree,
A monumental
project, to climb the Family Tree.
Now some folks came from Scotland and
some from Galway Bay,
Some were French as pastry, some German, all the way.
Some went on west to stake their claim, some stayed near by the sea,
Grandma
hopes to find them all as she climbs the Family Tree.
She wanders through
the graveyard in search of date or name,
The rich, the poor, the in-between,
all sleeping there the same.
She pauses now and then to rest, fanned by a gentle
breeze
That blows above the Fathers of all our Family Trees.
There were
pioneers and patriots mixed in our kith and kin
Who blazed the paths of wilderness
and fought through thick and thin.
But none more staunch than Grandma, whose
eyes light up with glee
Each time she finds a missing branch for the Family Tree.
Their skills were wide and varied, from carpenter to cook
And one (Alas!)
the record shows was hopelessly a crook.
Blacksmith, weaver, farmer, judge, some
tutored for a fee,
Long lost in time, now all recorded on the Family Tree.
To some it's just a hobby, to Grandma it's much more,
She knows the joys
and heartaches of those who went before.
They loved, they lost, they laughed,
they wept, and now for you and me
They live again in spirit, around the Family
Tree.
At last she's nearly finished and we are each exposed.
Life will
be the same again, this we all supposed!
Grandma will cook and sew, serve cookies
with our tea.
We'll all be fat, just as before that wretched Family Tree.
Sad to relate, the Preacher called and visited for a spell,
We talked about
the Gospel, and other things as well,
The heathen folk, the poor and then - 'twas
fate, it had to be,
Somehow the conversation turned to Grandma and the Family
Tree.
We tried to change the subject, we talked of everything
But then
in Grandma's voice we heard that old familiar ring.
She told him all about the
past and soon was plain to see
The preacher, too, was nearly snared by Grandma
and the Family Tree.
He never knew his Grandpa, his mother's name was ...
Clark?
He and Grandma talked and talked, outside it grew quite dark.
We'd
hoped our fears were groundless, but just like some disease,
Grandma's become
an addict - she's hooked on Family Trees!
Our souls were filled with sorrow,
our hearts sank with dismay,
Our ears could scarce believe the words we heard
our Grandma say,
"It sure is a lucky thing that you have come to me,
I know exactly how it's done, I'll climb your Family Tree!"
~ Author
Unknown ~