My father is a baillie from a wee farm at Caiplie He worked on the land all the days of his life By the time he made second, he aye said he reckoned He'd ploughed near on half of the East Neuk of Fife He worked on at Randerston, Crawhill and Clephanton Cambo and Carnbee and Big Rennyhill At Kingsbarns he married, at Boarshill he's buried But man, had he lived, he'd be ploughing on still For those days were his days, those ways were his ways To follow the plough while his back was still strong But those days are past and the time came at last For the weakness of age to make way for the young I was not for ploughing, to the sea I was going To follow the fish and the fisherman's ways In rain, hail and sunshine, I'd watch the long runline No man more contented his whole working day I've longlined the Fladden Ground, the Dutch and the Dogger Bank Pulled the big fish from the big Devil's Hole I've side trawled off Shetland, the Faroes and Iceland In weather much worse than a body could thole For that day was my day, that way was my way To follow the fish while my back was still strong But that day is past and the time came at last For the weakness of age to make way for the young My sons they have grown and away they have gone To search for black oil in the far northern sea Like oilmen they walk and like yankees they talk There's not much in common between my sons and me They've rough-rigged on Josephine, Forties and Ninian Claymore and Dunlin, Fisher and Awk They've made fortunes for sure, for in one run ashore They spend more than I earned in a whole season's work For this day is their day, this way is their way To ride the rough rigs while their backs are still strong But this day will pass and the time come at last For the weakness of age to make way for the young My grandsons are growin', to the school they're soon goin' But the long weeks of summer they spend here with me We walk through the warm days, talk of the old ways The cornfield and codfish, the land and the sea We walk through the fields that my father once tilled Talk with the old men that once sailed with me Man, it's been awfully good, I've shown them all I could Of the past and the present, what their future might be For the morn will be their day, what will be their way? What will they make of their land, sea and sky? Man, I've seen awful change, still it seems so strange To look at my world through a young laddie's eyes