Dirty Knuckle Buster

Written
1994


In this land of opportunity it

      once was possible to move up

      the child labor ladder.

First was watching a cow or two

       and bringing them to the barn for milking.

A good hand earned five cents a day

       and a quart of fresh milk.

From that position upward to paper boy

       for the out of town papers.

Not many customers so the bag was

        light and the walk long.

The snow talked back when stepped on

       early on a winter morn.

And if you had a good day collecting

        a dollar a week was possible.

But such work was for children

       like mowing your grandfather's

       lawn for a quarter.

The real world of child's work

      was the filling station.

Seventeen cents a gallon

       regular gas was hand pumped

       into a gallon marked glass tank.

The amber gasoline caught the sun

      setting over Prospect Point

       and became a piece of

      amber beauty not appreciated

      by the oil checker,

       tire checker and windshield wiper

       with a greasy nose.

Checking the fan belt was a way to churn

        a bit of business for the boss.

Sometime after learning to make the station

       some money and the time of shaving

        a lad could make it up to "grease monkey."

That was a great job and the salary

        of thirty cents an hour; almost

       the salary of some men.

Draining the oil into a drum

       was no problem

       after the drain plug was finally removed

      with a wrench that didn't fit.

Getting that plug off

       meant several skinned knuckles

       and a chance to practice the pretty speech

       learned from the body and fender men.

Skinned hands healed over greasy fingers

          and at the prom  hands

         are kept in pockets as much as possible.

Then promotion to mechanic's helper.

And then off to college to spend a life

        with clean, unskinned knuckles.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Notes
Published in trinidad Colorado My Home Town in 1996. I worked for Hugh Sayer and Cook and Strong as a grease monkey and gas man.My father was a hustler of jobs for me. I always worked. I made 20 cents an hour an finally worked up to 30 cents. Took care of my movie money and for Clark Karr also.