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Subj:.....Too Soon Old - Poem (S634)
          by Dave Griffith
          From: darrellvip on 2/28/2009
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Source1:
...http://www.palletmastersworkshop.com/old2.html

Source2:
...http://www.truthorfiction.com
.../rumors/c/crabby-old-man.htm

Drawing from The Permanente Journal...

This poem, titled Too Soon Old, was written by Dave Griffith  of Fort Worth, Texas.  Griffith wrote the poem more than 20 years ago and meant it to be simple, and too the point.  It is his life from youth through old age including high school football, Marines, marriage, the ravages of his own disabilities. 

Someone took the poem from his site, created a false story titles Crabby Old Man, and started it circulating on the Internet.  There is even a slide show and video based on the false story.
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......Too Soon Old - Poem 
.........by Dave Griffith 

What do you see nurses? . . What do you see? 

What are you thinking . . . . when you're looking at me? 

A crabby old man, . . . . . . . not very wise, 

Uncertain of habit . . . . . . . with faraway eyes? 

Who dribbles his food . . . . and makes no reply 

When you say in a loud voice . . 'I do wish you'd try!' 

Who seems not to notice . . . the things that you do. 

And forever is losing . . . . . . a sock or shoe? 

Who, resisting or not . . . . . . lets you do as you will, 

With bathing and feeding . . . the long day to fill? 

Is that what you're thinking?  Is that what you see? 

Then open your eyes, nurse . . you're not looking at me. 

I'll tell you who I am,  . . . . . . as I sit here so still, 

As I do at your bidding,  . . . . as I eat at your will.

I'm a small child of Ten . . . . . with a father and mother, 

Brothers and sisters . . . . . . . . who love one another.

A young boy of Sixteen . . . . . with wings on his feet 

Dreaming that soon now . . . . a lover he'll meet.

A groom soon at Twenty. . . . . My heart gives a leap. 

Remembering the vows. . . . . . that I promised to keep. 

At Twenty-Five, now  . . . . . . . I have young of my own. 

Who need me to guide . . . . . . and a secure happy home. 

A man of Thirty . . . . . . . . . . . my young now grown fast, 

Bound to each other . . . . . . . . With ties that should last. 

At Forty, my young sons . . . . . have grown and are gone, 

But my woman's beside me . . . to see I don't mourn. 

At Fifty, once more,  . . . . . . . . babies play 'round my knee, 

Again, we know children . . . . . My loved one and me.

Dark days are upon me . . . . . . My wife is now dead. 

I look at the future . . . . . . . . . I shudder with dread. 

For my young are all rearing . . young of their own. 

And I think of the years  . . . . . and the love that I've known. 

I'm now an old man . . . . . . . . and nature is cruel. 

Tis jest to make old age. . . . . . look like a fool. 

The body, it crumbles . . . . . . . grace and vigor depart. 

There is now a stone . . . . . . . . where I once had a heart. 

But inside this old carcass . . . . a young guy still dwells, 

And now and again . . . . . . . . . my battered heart swells 

I remember the joys. . . . . . . . . I remember the pain. 

And I'm loving and living . . . . life over again. 

I think of the years, all too few . . . . . gone too fast. 

And accept the stark fact . . . . . that nothing can last. 

So open your eyes, people . . . . open and see. 

Not a crabby old man    Look closer . . see . . . . ME!! 

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Remember this poem when you next meet an older person who you might brush aside
without looking at the young soul within . .  We will all, one day, be there, too! 

The best and most beautiful things of this world can't be seen or touched. 
They must be felt by the heart.

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