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But i'm happy (the life of a barn)
It took the village to raise me
They all came some in buggies some who walked
But it took the strong men of the village to raise me
And when I was raised they were happy
Especially the man in black and the young woman in white
And when the village went away they kissed beneath my roof
It was the man and his family who filled me with animals and hay
They hung crops from my eves to dry
I’d give shelter to the chickens who scurried about my floors
And at night the cows conversed about how it’s greener in other fields
The young one came a year later the woman carried her about
She said “this is your barn” I suppose that was my name
The village said it was when they raised me
The young one grew and chased the chickens round inside of me
I was her favorite place to play
When she was less young she was beautiful
One day she brought a boy to meet me
She said “this is my barn” and they giggling kissed beneath my roof
He wore black tinted glasses on his eyes and slicked his hair back with a comb
I was happy to meet him he was different
One night the man took the boy to see me
He sat him down to talk then they started yelling
The young one ran in crying and begged them to stop
I didn't see the boy after that night
But the young one sat on my hay and leaned on my wall, she cried that night
And it got cold but she did not leave me I was happy to comfort her
She fell asleep in me that night and the woman brought her blankets
But it was very cold and she must have been very tired
Because she didn't get up when the man brought her breakfast
And he quietly carried her away from me brushing the hair away from her pail face
I never saw the young one again the woman never came to see me anymore either
When I was raised she was happy but now she’d stand outside me and cry
Eventually I suppose she was done crying and never saw her again
Nor did I hear her whimpering voice say once again “my poor baby”
I didn’t know what a baby was but it seems they bring sadness so didn't want one
The man came to me one day like most days but this time he didn't come to get tools
He just sat on my hay and stared at my eves and closed his eyes
the man stayed there for a very long time till his family took him away
I never saw the man again …
I sat empty for a long time the man’s family took the animals and tools and closed my doors
My only friends now are the mice and rats and the owl that wants to know my name
I tried to tell her my name is Barn but she did not speak squeaking hinge
More different people came to visit me once long after
At first I didn't like them they spooked my friends the rats and my friend the owl left
They said I was abandoned and haunted and I liked the way they spoke
I don’t know what that means but I was happy to see them because they reminded me of the boy
They giggling spent the night telling stories about how an Amish man had murdered a boy
So his family died because the barn was cursed
I don’t know what “murdered” or “cursed” meant
But being cursed brought me visitors so I liked being cursed
They played hide and go seek in my loft and hay bails till one of them found a rusty nail
And was carried off in hysterics whimpering something about the barn giving them tetanus
I didn't know what “tetanus” was but I was happy to share
I didn't see them again after that
I've been alone again with my friend the owl who wants to know my name just her and the rats
She’s eaten all the mice I tried to tell her not to eat my friends but she doesn't speak groaning roof
I am not the same barn I was when they raised me
I don’t make people smile and nobody kisses under my roof
It took a village to raise me and a family to keep me up
Just the right gust of wind now I fear is all it takes to knock me down
But I am happy because I was raised
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