Sunday, November 10, 2019

Indo-China: The Sky to Moc Hoa - poem for Veterans' Day / Remembrance Day

(This is a re-post for Veterans' Day / Remembrance Day)


Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

The Sky to Moc Hoa

The sky to Moc Hoa is hazily blue,
Layered between heat and Heaven. The damp
Rots even the air with the menace of death.
The ground below, all green and holed, dies too;

It seems to gasp: You will not live, young lad,
You will not live to read your books or dream
About a little room, a fire, a pipe,
A chair, a pen, a dog, a truth-told poem
Flung courteously in manuscript pages
Upon a coffee-stained table, halo’d
In a 60-watt puddle of lamp-light.

You skinny, stupid kid. You will not live.

Then circling, and circling again, again,
Searching, perhaps, for festive rotting meals,
Down-spinning, fear-spinning onto Moc Hoa,
Palm trees, iron roofs, spinning in a dead sun,
Spinning up to a swing-ship spinning down.
A square of iron matting in a green marsh,
Hot, green, wet, fetid with old Samsara.

Gunboats diesel across the Van Co Tay,
Little green gunboats, red nylon mail sacks,
Engines, cheery yells, sloshing mud, heat, rot.
Mail sacks off, mail sacks on, men off, men on,
Dark blades beating against the heavy heat,
The door gunners, the pilot impatient.
All clear to lift, heads down, humans crouching
Ape-like against the grass, against the slime
In sweating, stinking, slinking, feral fear
As the dragon-blades roar and finally fly,
And the beaten grass and beaten men
Now stand again erect in gasping heat,
Some silent in a new and fearful world.

You will not live, young hero; you will die.
What then of Dostoyevsky and Chekhov?
What then of your Modern Library editions,
A dollar each at the Stars & Stripes store
Far away and long ago in DaNang,
All marked and underlined? What is the point?
What then of your notebook scribbled with words,
Your weak attempts at poetry? So sad,
So irrelevant in the nights of death.
The corpses on the gunboat decks won’t care,
Their flare-lit faces staring into smoke
At 0-Two-Damned Thirty in the morning –
Of what truth or beauty are your words to them?

You haven’t any words anyway;
They’re out of movies and books, all of them.
What truth can adventure-story words speak
To corpses with their eyes eaten away?

Write your used emotions onto a page;
You haven’t any emotions anyway;
They’re out of the past, all of them.
What truth can used emotions speak to death?

So sling your useless gear aboard the boat:
A seabag of utilities, clean socks,
Letters, a pocket knife, a Rosary,
Some underwear, some dreams, and lots of books.

And board yourself. Try not to fall, to drown,
To be a floating, bloating, eyeless face.
Not yet. Think of your books, your words. Look up:
The sky to Moc Hoa is hazily blue.

Notes:

1. Moc Hoa, pronounced Mock Wah -- a town on the Vam Co Tay River near the border with Cambodia.

2. “Young lad” or “lad” – employed sarcastically of recruits by chief petty officers.

3. “Young hero” – employed sarcastically of recruits by chief petty officers and of Navy Corpsman in Field Medical Service School by Marine sergeant-instructors.

4. Utilities – heavy, olive-drab, 1950s style Marine Corps battle-dress issued to Navy personnel on their way to Viet-Nam. Too darned hot. I had to scrounge lighter clothing.

5. Samsara – in some Eastern religions the ocean of birth and death.

6. Gunboats – here, PBRs, or Patrol Boat, River. The history and characteristics of this excellent craft and its use in river warfare are well documented.

7. Stars and Stripes store – more accurately, any one of the chain of Pacific Stars and Stripes book stores.

8. Swing ship – a helicopter, in my experience always the famous Huey, employed for carrying supplies and personnel on routine routes. The pilots sometimes spun them in very fast in order to try to avoid ground fire.

9. Seabag – duffel bag.

Saturday, November 9, 2019

Indo-China: Craters in Kien Tuong Province - poem for Veterans' Day / Remembrance Day

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Craters in Kien Tuong Province

The craters quickly fill, and become ponds
For fishing and swimming, watering the cows
A baptism by nature in healing the earth
From the unoriginal sins of man

Fruit of the bomb and work of human hands
It will become for some a source of life
It will remain for us a stern reproach -
One cannot win the hearts and minds of the dead

And then we too become one with the lost
The craters quickly fill, and become ponds

Friday, November 8, 2019

Indo-China: Toilet Paper in Your Ears - poem for Veterans' Day / Remembrance Day

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com


Indo-China - Toilet Paper in Your Ears

3M Sued for Defective Military Ear Plugs
-News Item

We weren’t issued defective ear plugs
We weren’t issued any ear plugs at all
And so we carried toilet paper in wads
To stuff into our ears when the racket began

We weren’t issued lightweight jungle tops
I inherited mine from the remains
Of a boy who had stepped on One of Theirs
There wasn’t much left of his trousers

The fetid river water washed out the blood
I carried toilet paper and some smokes

Thursday, November 7, 2019

Indo-China: Field Medical Service School, Camp Pendleton - couplet for Veterans' Day / Remembrance Day

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Field Medical Service School, Camp Pendleton:
And is that “Lock and load” or “Load and lock?”

Not the sailors, not even the Marines
Can tell you what “Lock and load!” really means

Ernest J. Gaines of Pointe Coupee Parish and the World - weekly column, 11.7.19

Lawrence Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Ernest J. Gaines of Pointe Coupee Parish and the World

Once upon a time and far away (Louisiana) I won a writing award of minimal distinction and, worse, no remuneration.

However, I was privileged (along with some thirty or more other young men and women) to enjoy a pleasant hour or so with Ernest Gaines at the University of Southwestern Louisiana, now the University of Louisiana Lafayette.

Universities, like banks, change their names and their galactic overlords so often that, as a friend says, they should display their names as Velcro banners.

Professor Gaines, natty in his beret, was happy to visit with us, indulge our foolish questions, and give us sage advice, and enjoyed himself immensely.

Born as a sharecropper’s son in the Jim Crow time, young Ernest was not permitted to attend high school in his home parish, and so was sent to live with relatives in California. After high school he did his time in the Army, and then on the G.I. Bill attended San Francisco State and then Stanford University.

He was successful but loved Louisiana and so returned home to teach at the university and to buy some of the land he and his ancestors had worked. He contributed to his community through many gifts of service, and the lad who was not permitted to attend high school (though he was expected to join the Army) became a man whom governors were pleased to visit, metaphorical hat in hand.

Professor Gaines’ books include The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, A Gathering of Old Men, and A Lesson Before Dying, some of which were made into films. The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, with Cicely Tyson, won numerous awards, and the underrated A Gathering of Old Men is equally brilliant.

But what if Dr. Gaines, writer and professor, had never achieved the honors he well earned? What if he were Mr. Gaines, a neat old man who worked at the grocery store? Would he have been the same avuncular, industrious, thoughtful, considerate, Louisiana-loving man rocking a cool beret?

You bet he would. Some dullard with a limited vocabulary wrote that he was an icon, which is the sort of pointless filler language used by people who don’t even know what an icon is. Ernest Gaines was not an icon; he was what he would have been in any circumstances in life: a good man.

Professor Ernest J. Gaines, a child of Pointe Coupee Parish and then its patriarch, died last week. We can’t visit with him now, but we still have his books about good and brave people in hard times.

Come to think of it, he kindly signed a copy of A Gathering of Old Men for the students of Kirbyville High School and sent his good wishes to them. I hope it is not reposing in dust on the library shelf, but instead is now well-worn from many readings.

-30-

Wednesday, November 6, 2019

Recruit Training: I Wasn't Rich, But I Jingled When I Marched - poem for Veterans' Day / Remembrance Day

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Recruit Training - I Wasn’t Rich, But I Jingled When I Marched

Dog tags for dogs and, for a time, for me
Old Uncle Sugar said my religion was CATH
(Had I remained a Methodist, a PROT)
My blood type was O POS (still is, I guess)

The Navy thought all that such a good idea
They made me wear a second tag just like it
On a second little chain attached to the first
All dangling down my skinny Gilligan chest

Beaded chains, tags, a Saint Christopher’s Medal -
I wasn’t rich, but I jingled when I marched

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

The Hummingbirds Have Flown to Mexico - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

The Hummingbirds Have Flown to Mexico

The hummingbirds have flown to Mexico
Above the dark malevolence of man:
No border patrols, no criminal gangs
No wire, no walls, no displaced persons’ camps

The hummingbirds have flown to Mexico
To celebrate bright Navidad and be
Pequeno flores de Nochebuena
For the delight of our dear Infant Lord

The hummingbirds have flown to Mexico
On pilgrimage, for God will have it so

Monday, November 4, 2019

A Prisoner's Library - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

A Prisoner’s Library

“For hym was levere have at his beddes heed
Twenty bookes, clad in blak or reed…”

-Chaucer, on his Clerk of Oxenford

A prisoner’s bunk is also his library
His few books neatly stacked next to his head
A bible and maybe its commentary
Self-improvement pamphlets, a novel or two

A prisoner’s bunk is his home for now
Some pencils and a writing tablet, and notes
And letters hugged up with a rubber band
So in the night his tears can touch them still

A prisoner’s life is his university -
But, hey, spaghetti again for dinner?

Sunday, November 3, 2019

Your Norton Has Expired Your McAfee Has Expired Your Norton Has Expired... - doggerel

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com


YOUR NORTON HAS EXPIRED YOUR MCAFEE
HAS EXPIRED YOUR NORTON HAS EXPIRED YOUR
MCAFEE HAS EXPIRED YOUR NORTON HAS
EXPIRED YOUR MCAFEE HAS EXPIRED


Horton hears a Hoo, and a Hoo hears a Horton
But not
Through all those screen-freezes from McAfee and Norton


YOUR NORTON HAS EXPIRED YOUR MCAFEE
HAS EXPIRED YOUR NORTON HAS EXPIRED YOUR
MCAFEE HAS EXPIRED YOUR NORTON HAS
EXPIRED YOUR MCAFEE HAS EXPIRED

Saturday, November 2, 2019

Friday, November 1, 2019

The Harp of Dorkness and More Mixed Metaphors - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

The Harp of Dorkness and More Mixed Metaphors

Why do weaklings allow that strutting Cassius
To enjoy a caudillo’s veto over
Their happiness? Stop. Poor D. T. may be
A bit of an Axis but he is not an axis

Why do men surrender their thoughts to him?
He is not the center of anything
He is not even a periphery
He is merely on a periphery

Soon to spin out and away into
A formless voice without our causation
An unremembered voice that echoes for a while
And then decays beyond the silent Lethe

Thursday, October 31, 2019

...Those 2019 Astros World Champions Shirts - weekly column 10.31.19

Lawrence Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

What Will Happen to all Those 2019 Astros World Champions Shirts?

Last week y’r ‘umble scrivener happened to be visiting the local elementary school on Book Parade Day. The little children were all dressed up as their favorite characters from their favorite books, and then while holding their books processed joyfully through the halls.

One of the extra joys was seeing the great number of old friends from our own books of the long-ago: Hank the Cow Dog, Robin Hood, Little Bo Peep, Minnie Mouse, Three Blind Mice (they were teachers, and I’m sure there’s no symbolism…), Alice in Wonderland, Bob the Builder, the Little Mermaid, butterflies, firefighters, elves, cowboys, fairies, cops, princesses, bears, football players, baseball players (no Washington Gnationals among our well-brought-up children, of course) one shark with gynormous flippers, somewhat fewer than 101 dalmatians, the Cat in the Hat, Princess Ella, astronauts, ballerinas, a giraffe, honeybees, dinosaurs (one of them a great big green one), some witches (not the math teachers), rabbits, farmers, and, oh, all sorts of childhood pals.

One of the principals was got up splendidly as Raggedy Andy. You haven’t lived until you’ve seen your principal costumed as Raggedy Andy.

C.S. Lewis wrote that a good children’s book is one that is again a joy when re-read in adulthood. So when was the last time you saddled up with Roy and Gene, sailed with Jim Hawkins and Long John Silver, or fell down that rabbit hole?

Well done, librarians and teachers and office gnomes and aides and parents and scary principals!

Y’r ‘umble fellow citizen also had an occasion to indulge in volunteer fire department takeaway barbecue on Sunday after meetin’.

There is nothing more truly American than our local volunteer fire departments. Firefighters have jobs and families and other community commitments, and then after work they spend hours and hours in training programs (and polishing up the big red fire trucks). And all this so that, for no pay at all, they can be ready to roll night and day, in all sorts of weather, to serve humanity in fires, floods, car crashes, medical emergencies, and the heartbreak of an Astros loss. And they hold fund-raisers to help fund the the gas and the gear.

Volunteer firefighters - they’re the best.

Finally, what indeed will happen to all the Houston Astros World champion shirts that were (sniff) never sold?

I don’t know what the sporting goods stores and suppliers will do this year with all those shirts they had manufactured with high hopes. In the past, such shirts have often been written off and shipped to religious and secular charities to be given away in poorer countries.

Thus, if you take a nice vacation this next year and see a little kid wearing a shirt boasting that the Houston Astros are the 2019 world champions, enjoy the moment. A kid who didn’t have a shirt will now have a shirt, and that’s good. And the shirt will read “HOUSTON ASTROS, 2019 WORLD CHAMPIONS.” And that’s good too. You might even say that the occasion is its own championship moment.

-30-

Halloween Seems Illogical - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel@blogspot.com

Halloween Seems Illogical

Well, after all, we costume ourselves each day
Cloaking the little hurts and little pains
Those disabling vulnerabilities of
The casual abrasiveness of life

Playing dress-up in courtesy and smiles
Just as we should, in disciplining ourselves
To selfless service to humanity
Hoping somehow to make the costume real

For after all, we make ourselves each day
Less obvious pilgrims along the sacred way

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Edgar Allan Poe's E-Reader - poem (of sorts)

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Edgar Allan Poe’s E-Reader

Once upon a night shift dreary, while I pondered bleak and beery,
Over many a quaint and curious download of forgotten lore,
While I zoned out, nearly winking, suddenly there came a blinking,
As of something gently clinking, clinking at my website door.
'Tis some skimmer," I muttered, "hacking through my coded door -
Only this, and nothing more."

Quote the Raven: “Thank you for your recent payment of $171.12 to your Viasat Internet account. To set up automatic payments, please log into your account, click on the Billing & Payments tab, then the Payment Method sub-tab, and update your payment method accordingly. As part of the Viasat customer agreement, we require a valid payment method on file for monthly payments. If you haven’t logged into your account yet, you will need your account number: (666). If you have any questions or need help, try utilizing one of our self-service tools.”

Tuesday, October 29, 2019

Our Little Town has no Statues to Destroy - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel@blogspot.com

Our Little Town has no Statues to Destroy

Our little town has no statues at all
No Confederate leaning on his gun
Or Washington drawing his sword against
The Hessians of perfidious King George

Our little town has no statues to condemn
No doughboy scrambling over the top
Or sailor posing with a cannon round
While disapproving of a German sub

Our little town has no statues to destroy
But we’ve got a red light and a pizza place

Monday, October 28, 2019

An Artist of Great Vision, and, Like, S*** - doggerel

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

An Artist of Great Vision, and, Like, S***

An artist daring, different, authentic
Vibrant and strong, a daring, unique voice
A breaker of glass ceilings, transgenic
Because she writes "f***" and "s***"
                                      - just like the boys


Sunday, October 27, 2019

A Promise Made in the Name of the Saints - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

A Promise Made in the Name of the Saints

For Brother Columba and Brother Joseph, O.S.B.

“He will make his promise in the name of the saints
whose relics lie there, and to the abbot.”

-Rule of Saint Benedict, Chapter 59

Some men could swim across the Hellespont
Or walk poor Keats’ dark forest thoughtlessly
Drink deeply from the Castalian font
And through dear Shelley’s moonbeams kiss the sea

Some men could dream across Creation’s arc
With Tennyson beyond the sunset sail
Soar past the solar fields and then embark
To guard with virtue stern the Temple veil

But other men…

But, peace – all Grace in whole, and not in part
Upon the Altar, and within each heart

Saturday, October 26, 2019

A Wild Duck on the Thames - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com


A Wild Duck on the Thames

That singular duck died along that shore
And yet its shadow sails across the screen
Deep black against yellow, a sunset scene
A quacking intro to Saint Thomas More

Ducks die, and martyrs too, but still the Thames
Flows languidly to London and the sea
This water-song of our Island history
Our scurrilous ballads and sacred hymns

Sung merrily past monuments in stone
In praise of our Island’s Altars and Throne

(And there are waterfowl)



Cf. the opening credits of A Man for All Seasons, 1966

Friday, October 25, 2019

Is That Potato Loaded? - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Is That Potato Loaded?

Flashbacks from Perusing the Over-55 Menu at Denny’s

“Loaded potato soup,” the waitress said
In reply.
                   Ah, yes, I thought to myself
Loaded potato soup. That’s how we downed
That commie spy plane back in ’67.

(Nothing about it in the papers, of course)

You never aimed loaded potato soup
At anything you didn’t mean to kill
The C.I.A. swore by their barley-and-lamb
But, pffft! Barley. Fine for a lady’s purse.

Yanks, eh. (That’s not for the papers, of course)

I was concealed-carry-potato cleared
MI 6.2 saw the paperwork through
All hush-hush, though the Reds were in on it
When it comes to potatoes, Commies know

(You won’t read about it in the papers, of course)

Oh, yes, those were the happy times, m’lad
A dry potato soup, shaken, not stirred
By a Eurasian seductress named Ethel
In our safe house in Tottenham Court Road

(Nothing about her in the papers, of course)

A quiet telephone call, a messenger
With tickets to some far-off capital
And a discreet flask of potato soup
Hidden deep within a hollowed-out Bible

(Not reported in the papers, of course)

And then there was the curious incident
Of nuclear loaded potato soup
And the dread falafel of lingering death
In Constantinople in ‘78

(It was hushed up in the papers, of course)

The few of us who survived were taken discreetly
To Buckingham Palace, where Her Majesty
Awarded us The Order of the Tuber
And then she served us all potato soup

(You won’t read about it in the papers, of course)

Oh, little did that merry waitress know
Of her customers’ sinister histories
Only a couple of elderly gents, but
Still sworn to The Official Secrets Act

(For they were never in the papers, of course)

Thursday, October 24, 2019

Real Americans Vote - weekly column 10.24.19

Lawrence Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Real Americans Vote

In my rural county the ballot is still paper but the gadget nerds in Austin have electrified the rest of the process – one’s driving license (“or other approved form of i.d.”) is scanned by a robotic eye, which issues a paper permission slip to the nice lady behind the table who then hands the paper permission slip to the voter. The voter carries the paper permission slip maybe three feet along the same table to another nice who takes the paper permission slip. The voter then signs a telescreen with a magic stylus. After this, the voter chooses from among three ballots, is issued a special blue plastic pen (“Be sure to return it”), and withdraws into a large space to sit at any of dozens of little desks to hide behind a folding cardboard screen (printed in patriotic colors).

After marking his ballot the voter carries it (“Be sure not to fold your ballot”) to a zippered plastic fiber box which looks like it might have begun life as a beer cooler and slides it in. Everyone thanks everyone else and the exercise in democracy is over.

Still, the creeping computerization of elections is frightening. Remember the onboard computers that brought down airplanes and killed hundreds of people this summer, sacrificed to the demon idol Progress.

Paper ballots are scanned by electro-mechanical machines, and that’s fine. Doubtful ballots are evaluated by committees and a decision is made. Corrupting a paper ballot can be done (as the ghost of Lyndon Johnson could tell you), but it requires a conspiracy of traitors who must fudge one ballot at a time.

But millions of electronic ballots can be corrupted at one time by one sullen, resentful little mansie who can’t get a date but has Learned. To. Code. That’s how we see it written, this magic incantation that will feed the poor and make the lame walk again: Learn. To. Code.

Learn. To. Code. worked so well for the airplanes and the people who went down with them.

Let’s keep the paper ballots. If bad people are going to change our votes, make them work at it. As the ghost of Lyndon Johnson could tell you.

As with all elections, this is an important one, with ten proposed constitutional amendments (our constitution dates from just after Reconstruction and is a clumsy mess) that must be addressed. Locally there are no other issues, but in a few other counties and precincts there are also special races to fill empty offices and resolve certain county and precinct issues.

The Texas Tribune (https://www.texastribune.org/2019/10/15/texas-2019-constitutional-amendments-what-voters-need-know/) offers the best discourse on those ten proposed amendment, including the complete wording and a reasoned discussion which attempts objectivity and which does not tell the citizen how to vote. A certain area daily newspaper, on the other paw, features only truncated wording, and offers questionable recommendations, including a suggestion that a state income tax might be a good idea and should not be left to the voters to decide.

Pitching hissy-fits on the Intergossip is irrelevant. We must think and vote.

Self-government is not a spectator sport.

-30-

Hanzi - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Hanzi

A bronze-age Emperor, home from the wars
Master of a thousand chariots
Gives all his children the miracle of words
Like spring wildflowers, summer grass, autumn leaves

So that all our perceptions and imaginings
Can fly up to the heavens and around the earth
As prayers, whispers, letters, books, and songs
And poetry, the quiet voice of God

A scholar-poet inks the Hanzi for us -
In them we see true pictures of our lives

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

When the Missionaries, the Soldiers, and the Journalists Came to the Fields That Were Not Theirs - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

When the Missionaries, the Soldiers, and the Journalists
Came to the Fields That Were Not Theirs

The missionaries came

And said that they were out in the far fields
Spreading the Gospel in exotic fields
Preaching and suffering out in their fields
Our homes

The soldiers came

And said that they were on the battlefields
Killing each other in their far-off fields
Cornering corpses in some foreign fields
Our homes

The journalists came

Talking, talking, talking out in their fields
Safari-costumed in their quaintish fields
And writing us as objects in their fields
Our homes

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

A Synod for the Thames on the Occasion of the Amazon Synod - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

A Synod for the Thames

On the Occasion of the Amazon Synod

Five merry English friars
Gathered along the Thames
Near where the Isis joins up higher
And there they sang four hymns:

One for the ale, one for the beer
One for the burgundy pinched from the hall
One for the whisky that costs so dear
And one for sweet Joan, who served them all

And after they prayed an Ave and a Pater
They pitched a Roundhead into the water!


(All true Christians know impish Joan, who in the Robin Hood stories serves ale “of good October brewing” at the Blue Boar Inn.)

Monday, October 21, 2019

Whatever Happened to the Tank Commander Who Disobeyed Orders? - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Whatever Happened to the Tank Commander Who Disobeyed Orders?

A brave little man with a shopping bag
Defiantly stood before an army tank
A foul machine designed to grind free men
Into bloody scraps to be hosed away

Two unknown men - it was not the tank that stopped
It was the tank commander who stopped the tank
All that is left is old videotape:
Two bullets made all problems disappear

A brave little man with a shopping bag
Another brave man with a battle tank:

They stopped -
And, yes, someday China will be free

Sunday, October 20, 2019

Notre Dame de Grange en Etain - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Notre Dame de Grange en Etain

“…a small red flame – a beaten-copper lamp of deplorable design…”

-Evelyn Waugh, Brideshead Revisited

All greatness is complex and flawed, all truth
Can well be twisted like a dream deferred
Or like a sweat-stained bandaging of shame
In desolation grasped in desperate prayer

All smallness is complex and flawed, all men
Can well be twisted like justice denied
Or like a blood-stained pallium of death
In desolation grasped in desperate prayer

But in shabby buildings and in shabby men
A small red flame still shines among debris




("Notre Dame de Grange en Etain" alludes to contemporary church architecture having the effect of a big tin barn hardware store or lumber supply)

Saturday, October 19, 2019

Dropping Some Accidie - rhyming couplet

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Dropping Some Accidie

Since I can’t fight it
I’d better write it

Friday, October 18, 2019

Noiring the Essentialing of Decolonization - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Noiring the Essentialing of Decolonization

Decolonization the packing trope
And privilege it into a spiteful verb
That dialogues passive obedience
From rotted patriarchy triumphant

Hegemonic the marginalized
And queer the stale unqueer into a yawn
Narrativing our oppressivism
And ecocrime all those who aren’t us

Perceptive me, the special way I see -
So why aren’t you listening to ME ME ME!?

Thank you for writing!

Dear Several People,

Yes, thank you for writing. I have mostly used poeticdrivel.blogspot.com as a backup and for sharing without taking comments, but with the failure of someone's purportedly professional site I will be open to comments here - IF I can figure out how to make that work! I am not a professional techno-whiz, but my momma raised me to respond to letters and I do try to live up to her expectations.

If you do not hear from me it's because I haven't yet figured out how to make a site work; I respond to everyone except gloomsters, doomsters, and all-purpose jerks.

Cheers,

Lawrence

Thursday, October 17, 2019

Snarl for the Camera - weekly column for 17 October 2019

Lawrence Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Snarl for the Camera

Once upon a Kodak time when the children were shoo-shooed into the yard for a family picture, the artistic command was “SMILE FOR THE CAMERA!”

Given the perception that camera film was very slow and wouldn’t work in the shade (in fact, ASA400 was common by the 1950s, and works very well in cloudy light), everyone one was made to grin into the fiercest sun and try to look happy about it through tears.

The artistic command for portraiture today appears to be “SNARL FOR THE CAMERA!”

For reasons best known to The Little People I receive occasional electrical ads from Canada Goose, the manufacturer of very reputable and very, very expensive coats and accessories for snow people.

The most recent Canada Goose ad featured a number of handsome / beautiful young adults sporting very nice coats and looking as if the photographer had just said some rude things about their mothers.

I just gotta say that if I were permitted to wear a Canada Goose coat (useful about once every two years here in East Texas – must be climate change) I’d be awfully happy about it.

A brief look around the InterGossip reveals that most pictures of adults, especially clothing ads, are all cranky and snarly these days. Apparently, happiness indicates a lack of artistry or coolness or something. If you don’t make a face like you have to go to the euphemism RIGHT NOW you just aren’t getting art and fashion right.

However, kid pix seem more joyful, whether a toddler at play or a high school athletic or academic team proudly showing their medals after a win.

And, no, grumpy-coots, I have never seen a participation medal. Those appear to exist only in the minds of the a.m. radio boys.

I once got a ribbon for second place in a junior high spelling bee. No one took my picture, though.

People still take pictures of their subjects lined up against a wall as if there’s going to be an execution. Try to have the subjects in the open with a field or woods off in the distance, and without a telephone pole appearing to grow from someone’s head. Give the auto-focus time to work, and take lots of shots from different angles. Something will come out right

Also, a cloudy day is much kinder to skin tones and all the colors of creation; bright sun washes all that out.

Finally, there’s already too much snarling in the world; a smile for the camera is sometimes just right.

-30-

Error 502 - The Machine Speaks of the Future of Poetry - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com
poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

Error 502 – The Machine Speaks of the Future of Poetry

What would Elizabeth Bishop say?

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On the Nature of Real Things - Weekly Column 10 October 2019

Lawrence Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com

On the Nature of Things

In the first century the Roman philosopher Lucretius wrote Rerum Natura (On the Nature of Things), which I have not read and probably never will read.

Nevertheless, the title is useful in itself for considering reality.

Last week y’r ‘umble scrivener read in an automotive magazine a review of a specialty electric vehicle. The reviewer noted, among the car’s other purported virtues, that an electric car does not pollute.

One would assume that a writer for an auto magazine would know better. One would assume in error.

Electric cars pollute. A lot.

A rechargeable vehicle requires multiple heavy-duty batteries, and the mining of the raw materials for batteries, the manufacturing of the batteries, and the safe disposal of the batteries at the end of their usefulness require much expenditure of those mean ol’ fossil fuels in generating energy for those processes.

More than that, the electricity necessary for charging and recharging the batteries that make the car go for a few miles ultimately come from, yes, those beastly coal-fired, nuclear-powered, or oil-powered generating plants.

My father once said that there are people who think that milk comes from the grocery store.

Similarly, there are people – one of them a writer in a technical magazine – who think that electricity comes from that little rectangle on the wall.

Fossil fuels are wonderful. Extracting them is labor-intensive, but they are so efficient in providing us energy and building our economy that they pay for that many times over.

Oil and coal are not only about powering our machines; they also are the bases for medicines, chemicals, eyeglass frames, computer cases, fans, windmills, solar panels, window frames and window panes, toothbrushes, notebooks, pens and the inks for them, telephones, safety devices, dyes, paints, flashlights, tools, watches, hoses, toys, scientific instruments, health care (Imagine the doctor saying, “I’ll just use my bare hands; those plastic gloves pollute.”), clothing, fishing rods, fishing lines, boat structures, camera…the list, as has been said, goes on and on. The perceptive reader of this excellent news can put the page down and look around to see all the wonderful things in his or her life whose structural origins are in the nifty atoms of oil and coal.

And, besides, the dinosaurs don’t need them anymore.

The sort of people who make an argument only through yelling at us often make an appeal to “science,” as if that Latin word for knowledge is some sort of magic incantation. When some shrill look-at-me-ista screams “Obey the science!” what she or he is really saying is, “I read it on some site on the GossipNet so it must be true! Obey me!”

If we want to know about cows, we ask farmers, not a little box made in China. You could take a turn milking Old Bessie (I’ve done it, thank you; Bessie and I parted company without a tear shed by either of us.). If we want to know about the efficiency of fuels we seek out the engineer and the chemist, not a little box made in China. If we want to know about cars, we ask the mechanic, not a little box made in China. If we want to be healed of a sickness or injury we ask the doctor or nurse practitioner, not Dr. Box from China.

Seeking knowledge from a little plastic box (made in China) that lights up and makes noises is futile. We learn only by studying, with our brains and our five senses, the nature of things as they are, not as they are programmed as images.

-30-


Wednesday, October 16, 2019

The President, Our Secular Lords, a Bishop, an Electronic Rosary, and a Drowning Bee

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

The President, Our Secular Lords, a Bishop,
an Electronic Rosary, and a Drowning Bee
 
A Meditation While Walking on a Chilly Autumn Day

The President – he flails his mouth about
And like a 16-year-old in pigtails screams
His daily hatreds on the GossipNet
While his madcappers pump their plumpish fists

Our secular lords investigate each other
Enthroned like pale Inquisitors of old
Arrayed in outrage and well-tailored suits
And not averse (perhaps) to Ukrainian gold

His Grace the Bishop likes to buy nice things
The evangelium of the nicer shops
Each with a most discreet and helpful staff
While we confess environmental sins

The Vatican touts an electric Rosary 1
While with my stick I save a drowning bee


1 https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/vatican-promotes-smart-rosary-selling-for-109-72180

“The bluetooth and water-resistant digital rosary is currently available for pre-order sale on Amazon.it for 99 euros, roughly $109. It is sold by “Click to Pray” -- an initiative of the Pope’s Worldwide Prayer Network.”

Even Chaucer’s Pardoner might find this a bit much.

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

A Not Especially Original Poem About October Rain

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com


A Not Especially Original Poem About October Rain

This morning I had planned to clear and burn
More of that summer-fallen live-oak tree
That giver of firewood against the winter cold
(I have more warmth than I will need - want some?)

But the afternoon’s rain arrived at dawn
I am inside with coffee, books, and thoughts
And meditations upon the rhythms
Of raindrops as they dance upon the panes

This morning I had planned to clear and burn

But I have my books

And so will give this day a thoughtful turn

Monday, October 14, 2019

Welcome to the U.S.A. - rhyming doggerel

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Welcome to the U.S.A.!

Visit the U.S.A.! We are the best!
(But don’t forget your bulletproof vest)

Sunday, October 13, 2019

The Icon on Your Desk - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

The Icon on Your Desk

We kiss the frame of an icon because
We pray for a Breath of the Eternal

We gaze upon an icon because
We pray for a Vision of the Eternal

We set a light before an icon because
We were given a Light to set

Saturday, October 12, 2019

"For English, Press 1..." - rhyming doggerel

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

“For English, press 1; for Spanish, press 2…”

But every caller speaks in an English tone –
Personne ne parle Français sur mon Anglophone!

Friday, October 11, 2019

Curating a Much-Need Curative for Curating - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Curating a Much-Needed Curative for Curating

To a Curator who Curates Everything

Today one reads that you curated tea
Before curating a bus into town
To curate your job at the coffee shop
And in the afternoon curating friends

Before curating to the artists’ loft
To continue curating the novel
You’ve been curating on for several months
While curating your classes and career

Your life is not a museum, you know
So DROP the CURATING; just let it GO

Thursday, October 10, 2019

Existential Ankle Monitors - couplet

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Existential Ankle Monitors

We pay for our restraints, strap them to ourselves
And then we wonder why there is no joy

Wednesday, October 9, 2019

"...A Pool Where a Kelpie Lived" - a poem for children

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

“…A Pool Where a Kelpie Lived”

“A little below the bridge was a pool where a kelpie lived.”

-Sigrid Unset, Kristin Lavransdatter, p. 8

If you are blessed with a little back yard
The smallest of gardens, a bit of grass
Then you have pixies and fairies and sprites
They like you, but they’re awfully shy, you know

If in your garden there is a little pool
Even a dish of water for the cat
Then you have a tiny kelpie or two
(And they are much nicer than you’ve been told)

In flower and leaf and water and soft night air -
Oh, yes, there is sweet magic everywhere

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

I Hate Bicyles - not exactly a poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

I Hate Bicycles

I hate bicycles.

I hate repairing bicycles.

I hate replacing bicycle tires.

I hate dismounting bicycle tires.

I hate mounting bicycle tires.

I hate inflating bicycle tires.

I hate barking my knuckles when the wrench slips.

I hate scraping my knuckles when the wrench doesn’t slip.

I hate the fire ants on whose mound I inadvertently sat while repairing the bicycle.

I hate fire ant bites.

I hate bicycles.

Listening to the radio while repairing, replacing dismounting, mounting, inflating, barking, and scraping is fun, though.

Monday, October 7, 2019

Dignity in a Genuflection - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Dignity in a Genuflection

Sunflowers do not bend toward the Sun; they genuflect
Which is exactly right for morning prayers
They have waited in place throughout the night
For His morning, and true enough, He comes

And through the day His liturgies of Light
Illuminating the letters and margins of life
With all the ornaments of Creation
Delight each flower in its work and play

Ordering all endeavors to great effect -
Sunflowers do not bend toward the Sun; they genuflect

Sunday, October 6, 2019

Are You Going to the Parish Picnic? - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com


Are You Going to the Parish Picnic?

Benedíc nos Dómine et haec Túa dóna quae de Túa largitáte súmus sumptúri.
Per Chrístum Dóminum nóstrum. Ámen.

Miz Busy with her homemade apple pies
Uncle Alfie lapsing into a snore
Young lads and lassies making goo-goo eyes
Miss Billie’s cookies (shhh…they’re from the store)

Children frolicking only with their ‘phones
Jolly old Ed basting burnt barbecue
An altar boy gorging until he groans
The teenagers’ gross game of choke and chew

Young marrieds getting into a squabble
Politics roaring like a thunderstorm
Bubba came drunk; he’s beginning to wobble
Tox ‘tater salad that’s gotten warm

Unidentifiable glop upon a stick –
No, I’m not going to the parish picnic

Saturday, October 5, 2019

Telephone Service on Top of Mount Everest - rhyming doggerel

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Telephone Service on Top of Mount Everest

Thousands of meters high, and hardly a breath
A sales call there among the frozen scree
And if you fall there, screaming to your death
Are you charged an early termination fee?

Friday, October 4, 2019

Reclining Nude with Pet Frog - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Reclining Nude with Pet Frog

For a scribbler in that art magazine

           “…bodiless heads, green horses and violet grass, seaweed,
shells and funguses...conventionally arranged
 in the manner of Dali.”

-Evelyn Waugh, Put Out More Flags, pp. 31-32

Making messes is but poor huswifery
Tie-dyeing creativity into
A finger-painting school of assemblage
Asymbol’d: “Reclining Nude with Pet Frog”

In praise of working people and, like, stuff -
Your comrade cleaners whom you claim to love
Could tell you what a simp you are. They won’t
Because they need their jobs, dear precious poof

So, disappear your selfies into your ‘phone -
The 1960’s are over and gone

In Search of Lost Time and a Watch Battery - weekly column 10.4.19

Lawrence Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com

In Search of Lost Time and a Watch Battery

Being among the last bearers of wristwatches, I occasionally need a watch battery, and these are difficult to find now.

Time is a curious concept. In one sense it can be said to be abstract, measurable only in observing the rotations and tilts of this shaky planet as it wobbles its elliptical orbit around the sun.

Christians perceive time as linear – it began with Creation and will end with Creation as God decides.

Other faith tradition say that time is a sort of cosmic sea, Samsara, and that life in its cycles of repetition is beyond time, sort of like waiting for an arrival or departure at Newark International Airport.

Before some clever German invented the clock, the measurement of time was dependent on where the sun was, and this varies greatly with the seasons. The monastic hours of lauds, prime, terce, sex, nones, vespers, compline, and matins regulated the day for monasteries and thus universities, businesses, and royal courts. However, monastic hours vary with the seasons, and, anyway, how can anyone determine compline and lauds on a rainy night?

When we speak of time we usually think of small and immediate measurements predicated on the solar day and broken up into hours, minutes, and seconds. Thus, while the concept of first light was (and remains) an appointed time for the beginning of a day on the farm, business appointments require more detailed measurements.

The Middle Ages (they are dark only to those who will not learn history) gave us all sorts of mechanical clocks thanks to the concept of fitting an escapement to geared wheels. The pocket watch, at first as bulky as a turnip, came later. And, really, who wants to carry a turnip around, even if it is an especially clever root crop specimen that can tell time?

Wrist watches enjoyed only a brief popularity. They were considered a sissy thing until the First World War, when manly men busy with rifles and bombs and geometrical tables for cannons needed quick access to a timepiece for properly scheduling the deaths of other men.

A hundred years later, and the wristwatch is mostly a historical curiosity, rather like London’s Big Ben. Most everyone checks the time by pulling from their pockets an electric telescreen which is bulkier and more to difficult to access than a pocket watch, but, hey, progress, right?

Still, time is fascinating, both in its measurement and in the abstract. We read that if we travel in space time alters, and that the accurate watches and clocks on a spaceship will, upon returning to earth, show a different time.

Whether or not space-time is fluid, it appears as a plot device in episodes of The Twilight Zone and Star Trek, and of course in Charlton Heston’s classic movie Planet of the Congressional Subcommittees: “Darn you! Darn you to Newark International Airport!”

My personal quest for a watch battery ended in despair, but a nice man manipulated a large brown delivery truck through one-dimensional space and with a fresh battery brought time back to my old eight-dollar Timex.

It’s about time.

-30-

Thursday, October 3, 2019

How Dare You!? How Dare You!? How Dare You See What You Have Seen!? - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

How Dare You See What You Have seen?

The dribbling Head in That Hideous Strength
A man behind a curtain, pulling cords
How many fingers, Winston, six or five?
Mrs. Wilson holding the president’s pen

Doctor Wakefield will see your children now
Sender Gleiwitz is very clear tonight
Reporting North Vietnamese attack boats
Sailing in crop circles to Area 51

A child abused upon The People’s throne

Go to the rostrum

We will tell you what to say

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Bring Your Bible to School Day - doggerel

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Bring Your Bible to School Day

Saint Matthew chapter 6, verses 1 through 4 -
They’re in the Bible too, and so much more

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

In Search of Lost Time and a Watch Battery - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

In Search of Lost Time and a Watch Battery

Time stops. The sweep hand seconds that no-motion
It fluttered in warning for several days
You were warned, and now you are out of time
That thing on your wrist is now but a weight

Oh, what is the nature of time? one asks
Oh, where is there a fresh 370?
The watch-opener reposes patiently
The tiny screwdrivers wait silently

Because without a 370 battery

(Which you can’t find in this town)

A watch is only useless tattery


Monday, September 30, 2019

Mr. Big Businessman in Knee-Pants - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com


Mr. Big Businessman in Knee-Pants

There wiste no wight that he was in dette

-Chaucer, General Prologue, line 279

If this were fifty years ago he’d sport
A cheap brown suit and a loud, too-wide tie
But now he wears knee-pants and cartoon tees
And fashion shoes that look like cancerous growths

And speaks like Chaucer’s merchant of his gigs
Contacts and contracts and deals to be made
Important ‘phone calls that must be taken now
In a voice of in-crowd guffawery

But when he clicks off his shiny MePhone
He asks for gas money to get him home

Sunday, September 29, 2019

A Little Child Dancing in Prison - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

A Little Child Dancing in Prison

But it’s not a prison; it’s a unit
(Euphemisms make everything all better)
The morning sun rising above the fog
Sparkles merrily on bright razor wire

A barefoot little girl dances and sings
She has already been wanded and searched
Her princess shoes examined for contraband
She’ll put them back on after Mommy’s turn

She gets to see her daddy again this week
And that is why she is dancing in prison



Please understand that prison staff are not Disney baddies; adults sometimes hide drugs and other contraband in their children’s clothing.

Saturday, September 28, 2019

When Life is a Waiting Room - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

When Life is a Waiting Room

A waiting room is not a room that waits
A waiting room is not a room who waits
Although in life there are bleak waiting rooms
A life itself is not a waiting room

Except when it is

Friday, September 27, 2019

Now, Children of Privilege, March Away - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Now, Children, March Away 1

Now, children, march away through Hamelin town
Obedient to the gauleiter’s wish
You must admire the emperor’s new gown
Shoal mindlessly ashore like grunion fish

And most obey, and upspeak programmed lines
Assembly-line rebels, they look alike
They wear their masters’ thrall-rings ‘round their minds
And call their servitude a climate strike

But who is strong? I really want to know
That one reflective child who just says

                               No.



1 As Henry V did not say

Thursday, September 26, 2019

When Did Our Federal Government Become an Episode of THE VIEW? - weekly column

Lawrence Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com

When Did Our Federal Government Become an Episode of The View?

“You in the West have no idea what it’s like to be ruled by peasants.”

-Mihai in Robert D. Kaplan’s Balkan Ghosts, p. 138

In majestic solemnity our great republic moves toward impeachment.

Oh, yeah.

Given that there are two obvious sides in the impeachment squabble, let us consider both positions.

The argument, or strophe, of one side seems to be:

They said that you said that he said that they said that you said that he said that they said that you said that he said that they said that you said that he said that they said that you that he said that they said that you said that he said that they said that you said that he said that they said that you said that he said that they said that you that he said that they said that you said that he said that they said that you said that he said that they said that you said that he said that they said that you…

But you get the idea.

The opposing side’s counter-argument, or antistrophe, appears to be:

Twitterkrieg toxic talkininity #poopypants manhood thing witch hunt garbage
removal battle look into risky unanimous point-of-privilege crime dog whistle fake news lock ‘em up nasty person twitterkrieg toxic talkininity #poopypants manhood thing witch hunt garbage nasty person removal battle look into risky unanimous point-of-privilege crime dog whistle fake news lock ‘em up toxic talkininity #poopypants manhood thing witch hunt garbage removal battle look into risky unanimous point-of-privilege crime dog whistle fake news lock ‘em up nasty person twitterkrieg toxic talkininity #poopypants manhood thing witch hunt garbage nasty person removal battle look into risky unanimous point-of-privilege crime dog whistle fake news lock ‘em up …

And, yes, we have seen it in HD and heard it in stereophonic they’ve-got-you-surrounded sound.

As for the epode, or resolution, that’s obvious:

A little of that governmental energy now wasted by both sides in palace gossip and in the great expense of another ill-considered show trial (remember Bill Clinton?) could be better directed to flood victims in Puerto Rico, Florida, the Carolinas, and now a few miles away, along the Texas gulf coast.

-30-

Gilligan's Island of Castaway Verse - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Gilligan’s Island of Castaway Verse

The discipline of reading at least one poem each day

The meter started getting rough aboard
A scheduled poetic three-minute tour
Across a sonnet or a blue haiku
Broken up by a wave of indolence

The Professor repairs an iamb or two
With a clam shell, seaweed, and coconuts
While Mary Ann recites “The Road Not Taken”
And the Skipper chases poor Gilligan

Who trips and falls, and finds a misplaced rhyme -
Maybe we’ll all get off the island this time!

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

In Majestic Solemnity Our Great Republic Moves Toward Impeachment - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

In Majestic Solemnity Our Great Republic Moves Toward Impeachment

Strophe, but not especially tidy:

They said that you said that he said that they
Said that you said that he said that they said
That you said that he said that they said that
You said that he said that they said that you

Antistrophe, but not especially tidy:

Twitterkrieg toxic talkininity
#poopypants manhood thing witch hunt garbage
Removal battle look into risky
Unanimous point-of-privilege crime

Epode, tidy in itself but there are human fragments in the street:

While unblinking security cameras
Watch the poor beating each other to death

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Ad was Inappropriate Not Interested in This Ad Seen This Ad Multiple Times Ad Cover Content - doggerel

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com


Ad was Inappropriate Not Interested in This Ad
Seen This Ad Multiple Times Ad Covered Content

Predatory ads from the N.R.A.
Site-blocking ads from them throughout each day -
O obtuse Google, make them go away

Monday, September 23, 2019

Poetic Solitude and Public Tension - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Solitude and Tension

Tension comes from a lack of solitude
When even a thought is interrogated
Examined, suspected, found to be flawed
Through our loving Article 58

What is your religion? Your politics?
Why do you write your words with the wrong hand?
Why do you write at all? Is that about us?
Why don’t you I.M. like normal people?

In nature an artist finds only delight
In his fellow humans only suspicion

Sunday, September 22, 2019

Beating the Gums of War - a poor poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Beating the Gums of War

“Hell hath no fury like a non-combatant”

-this phrase, attributed to many, dates back at least to the American civil war

Channeling John Wayne, their semi-autos on show
Leather-boy bandoliers draped with lots of ammo

          Hell hath no fury like a deer-stand commando

Old men beating their gums for war; oh, yes, it’s so
Each wearing his made-in-China camouflage chapeau

          Hell hath no fury like a café commando

Idle hookah heroes in Houston, don’cha know
Want their country liberated – our children must go

          Hell hath no fury like a narghile commando

Studs at their ‘puter games, screens all aglow
There’s nothing about George Patton that they don’t know

          Hell hath no fury like a keyboard commando

And corpses for the lamps of China to make the oil flow
They want your child to die for profits – just tell ‘em to blow

          Hell hath no fury like a private-jet commando

None of them made the first day of boot camp, oh, no
Though their thousand-yard stares are perfected guano

          Hell hath no fury like a ‘way-back commando

Saturday, September 21, 2019

Dwarf Porn Star in the News - couplet

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Dwarf Porn Star in the News

“Dwarf Porn Star Accused of Stabbing Boyfriend”
Maybe he got a little short with her.
                                                                  The End.

Friday, September 20, 2019

Never Pass Up an Opportunity to Flee for Your Life - weekly column

Lawrence Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com

Never Pass Up an Opportunity to Flee for Your Life

Several years ago a young person of my acquaintance came close to death by drowning.

Her first mistake was trusting her local government and the local dam authority to get anything right.

When the Harvey rains came the local government, via the usual media, urged the residents not to evacuate because they would only clog the roads and get in the way. Besides, the rain wouldn’t be all that bad.

Then, in the dark hours of the night, the dam authority upriver opened up the dam floodgates. They dam well didn’t bother telling anyone.

Even as the waters rose to the first floor of her building at dawn the local government kept telling people to shelter in place. The local government kept saying this even as the crew of a rescue boat told the young person of my acquaintance that there might not be another.

She was passed along a sequence of boats and a Houston Airport Authority dump truck in wind and rain, and at one point with others was wading waist-deep in foul and flowing waters, fearing at one point that she might have to release her two kittens and herself to the flood, giving them and herself to God.

At the end of this metaphorical chain she found shelter in a church. A few days later she wisely took a tetanus shot.

When we were able to able to drive through the muck to survey her apartment – there was much looting in the area – we found her car, well-mudded over and irretrievably ruined.

We could not open the doors to sort among her sodden belongings because her car was one of those whose features are entirely electric. The horrible reality then occurred to us – if many models of cars hit the water, you can’t get out. The door bolts are electrical, not mechanical.

You can’t get out.

You will scream out the horrible end of your life trapped in your car because some S.T.E.M. genius, a board of designers, and a board of corporate overlords are okay with you screaming out the horrible end of your life trapped in your car.

And then there’s the dam committee. In charge of the dam.

But, hey, plastic straws…

(https://dashcamtalk.com/forum/threads/can-you-unlock-your-door-lock-manually-if-not-it-could-be-dangerous.11993/)

-30-

"Now We're the People They Take Pictures Of" - poem

Lawrence Hall, HSG
mhall46184@aol.com

“Now We’re the People They Take Pictures Of”

A Harvey Refugee Reports:

When she with cats, papers, a change of clothes
And her old college bag to hold them all
Was one refugee among others in a dump truck
A Houston Airport Authority dump truck

Dieseling through rain and water and fear
With muck and mud sloshing across their feet
A woman next to her then laughed and said,
“Now we’re the people they take pictures of”

But there was no Capa to frame the scenes
Only oh-my-Godders with MePhone screens



(As the old saying goes, this isn't half the story. A young person of my acquaintance was caught in the flooding in Houston two years ago because she trusted her local government and the dam (and damn') authority when they told the people not to evacuate because they would only clog the roads.)

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Why is Saint Jude Annoyed with Me? - rhyming couplet

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

A Saint Jude Prayer Card

I thought to pray for a serious need, you see

But

Saint Jude seems a little annoyed with me




Really! He looks a bit like my high school principal.

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

The Ministry of Beer - rhyming couplet

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

The Ministry of Beer

“The sun looks down on nothing half so good as…
two friends talking over a pint of beer...”

― C.S. Lewis, "The Weight of Glory"

They may keep their dark Ministry of Fear -
We joy in our bright Ministry of Beer

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Tropical Storm Imelda - a poem of sorts

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Tropical Storm Imelda

As Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet did not say with his dying breath:

No, 'tis not so deep as a Harvey, nor so wide as a
Rita; but 'tis enough, 'twill serve.



Just because a tropical storm isn’t technically a hurricane doesn’t mean it won’t kill your children or you. Use your brain.

Monday, September 16, 2019

"AR-Style Weapon" - couplet

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

“AR-Style Weapon”

In ‘Nam they jammed with jinx and jump and jerk
But now against children the d*mned things work

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Taking the Pulse of the American People - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Taking the Pulse of the American People


I don’t want to take the pulse of the American people, she said

Only yours

Saturday, September 14, 2019

You Had One Job - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

You Had One Job One Job One Job

You had one job. I mean, really, one job
Just one job, and you didn’t do that job
Right? Right? Just that one job. And you didn’t
You didn’t do that one job, just that one job

All you had was that one job, that was all
Just that one job. What’s the matter with you?
One job. Just one job. One job, am I right?
And you couldn’t be bothered to do that one job

And what was that one job you didn’t do?
TO STOP SAYING, “YOU HAD ONE JOB!”
                                                                                 STOP IT!

Friday, September 13, 2019

An Old Man on the First Day of School - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

An Old Man on the First Day of School

Okay, I’m scared. Seventy-one years old
And scared. What if the teachers don’t like me?
What if those old principals don’t like me?
And what if the children don’t like me, huh?

I’m apprehensive about my first day
The librarian likes me, though. She’s nice
She asked me to be there. I’ll shine my shoes
And wear a clean shirt and tie – still, I’m scared

Oh, yes, there’s tension in the atmosphere
For this library reading volunteer!

Thursday, September 12, 2019

With a Side Order of Screaming Child - weekly column

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Lunch with Friends 

With a Side Disorder of Screaming Child and Bellowing Mother

Pajama Child, running and screaming: “Bye-bye. Bye-Bye! BYE-BYE! HEY!!! BYE-BYE!!!!”

Momma, not looking up from her MePhone: “Don’t run, honey. No. Don’t run! I SAID, ‘DON’T RUN!!!”

Pajama Child, standing in her seat and chewing her food over diners’ backs: “Wlb. Glb. Blrt! Uerk! Blye-blye!

Momma, not looking up from her MePhone:: “One…!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”

Pajama Child: “NO! CAN’T MAKE ME! NO, YOU! NO, NO, NO, NO!!!!!!!!”

Momma, not looking up from her MePhone: “Twoooooooooooooooooooooooooo…!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”

Pajama Child, throwing food: (SHRIEKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK!!!!!!!!!!!!”)

Momma, not looking up from her MePhone: “NO! I MEAN IT THIS TIME! One………!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”

Pajama Child, running and screaming around the restaurant: “NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!

Momma, not looking up from her MePhone: “Twooooooooooooooo…!!!! I mean it this time!!!! Twooooooooooooooooooo…!!!!!!”

Pajama Child: “NO, YOU! CAN’T MAKE ME! BYE-BYE! BYE-BYE-BYE!”

Momma, not looking up from her MePhone: “Do you need a spanking? I mean it this time!”



I blame the teachers and Donald Trump. I mean it. No, really. I mean it this time.

Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Genuine Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Genuine Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco

He sat on the old board fence, his chair of state
All spiffy in his Sunday-pressed khakis
Though he wasn't much for going to church
And his Other Hat, still a farmer’s hat

With his teeth and his workworn, sunburnt hand
(The other hand somehow mislaid in France)
He played the paper and ‘baccy and tag
Into a censer of sacred sweet smoke

And all us little boys watched him in awe
And hoped for the bag with its little string draw

Tuesday, September 10, 2019

"Killed in Uncertain Circumstances" - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

“Killed in Uncertain Circumstances”

In re John Cornford, 1936

One of the many bad things about being
A fervent Communist organizer is
That pretty soon some other Communists
Organize you

Monday, September 9, 2019

Crew Quarters and the Mafia - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Crew Quarters and the Mafia

When I was a-serving of their majesties Brown and Root

Rows of racks under aquarium lights
And scattered paperbacks: Louis L’Amour
Bravo Company battlefield yarns, (love)-books
About blonde hot rod babes with really big (pretties)

The crew, all older than I, were better books:
Mechanics, enginemen, crane operators
Welders, riggers, radiomen, divers
Draftsmen for the “as built” modifications

The cook was a nervous man from New Jersey
He looked over his shoulder and dropped things

Sunday, September 8, 2019

Sailing a September Sea with You - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Sailing a September Sea with You

When you sigh, tucked cozily beneath my arm
Are you thinking of a lover in the past
That worthy youth who was the first to sail
With you out into that wider, wilder sea?

How vain of me to wish that I had been
that sailor, how foolish, for here you are -
I think you’re laughing at me, and well you should
Are you as happy to be here as I am?

Growing old was not part of my master plan
The sea and I are both old now, but you –

                                           You are forever young

Saturday, September 7, 2019

No Doubt the Polyester is Decaying as it Should - doggerel

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

No Doubt the Polyester is Decaying as it Should

Is there a man of such steely self-control
Of such virtue, character, fortitude
Strength and pride in his manly role
Confidence and heart and stern attitude

Valor, endurance, resolution, will
Courage, patience, defiance, intellect
Manliness, ruggedness, rock-like, chill
Decision, quality, all cool and collect

That he doesn’t have to go and upchuck
Whenever he hears that “Desiderata” muck?

Friday, September 6, 2019

A Farm Boy Smiles at the Moon; the Moon Smiles Back - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

A Farm Boy Smiles at the Moon; the Moon Smiles Back

A child smiles at the moon; the moon smiles back
For they are friends, you see, both peek-a-boo
Behind and through the leaves of their favorite oak
In an ancient world that is forever young

Adults are children who have forgotten how
To see, and who have lost their bearings, their course
Their pirate-maps for sailing to the stars
And their lunar love-letters to be read in dreams

Among the fireflies, on the cooling-dusk field
A child smiles at the moon; the moon smiles back

Thursday, September 5, 2019

Nova Scotia and Newfoundland Do Not Exist - rhyming doggerel

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Nova Scotia and Newfoundland Do Not Exist

An American weather boy considers the storm
And all its tracks upon a glowing map
A hurricane by shape and scale and form
Roaring northeast through a low-pressure gap

There is nothing beyond holy New York City
Some unexplored land masses, it may be
Lost in the Atlantic (which is blue and pretty)
Where the hurricane will be harmless, you see

With a flip of his hand, they are dismissed:
Nova Scotia and Newfoundland do not exist

Wednesday, September 4, 2019

The School-to-Jail Pickup Truck Ride - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

County Prisoners

In the back of a county pickup truck
Odd jobs in lifting this and shifting that
And clearing the other – work gloves, chain saws
A rake, some shovels, water in the cooler

He wipes hot sweat with his zebra-stripe shirt:
“Better than the cells, Mr. H, much better
Sun and fresh air; it ain’t so bad, you know
A little hard work never hurt nobody

It was that old devil dope; I couldn’t say no…”

“Enough of that now, boys; we got to go.”

Tuesday, September 3, 2019

Senior Year - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com


Senior Year

You wake up in the morning and you know
You’ll only be all wrong again today
A prisoner of constant condemnation
And even your silence is suspicious

Your soul dissected for any dissent
Examined with sneering disapproval
And any hope is hissed with decent scorn
Your silence is especially suspicious
 
But maybe…

Maybe today – maybe it will be different…

You foolish boy; how wrong you always are

Monday, September 2, 2019

Harris Famous Roach Tablets - Doggerel (or roachherel)

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Harris Famous Roach Tablets

Since 1922

When roaches sense the coming winter
Into your palace, house, or flat they enter

Remember this, as each critter encroaches:
If you have a clean house you’ll have clean roaches

But…

They’ll eat your books, your food, your shoes, your clothes
Give them a chance and they’ll bite off your nose!

They’ll eat your cat, your hat, your baby brother -
They are even pleased to eat each other!

Unless you give them a taste of the Harris
Roaches – oh, ick! - might devour all of Paris

So serve them with Harris, and watch them die
With their quivering feet straight up to the sky

It’s up to you…

No queen, no king, no president, no pope
Need ever think about some cockroach dope

But you do



(I have no connection with the fine folks of Harris Famous Roach Tablets; however, my short-lived household roaches do.)

Sunday, September 1, 2019

For the First of September - poem (possibly a re-post)

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

September Twilight

The gasping summer heat withdraws at dusk
The hot winds still themselves, and now defer
To autumn’s promise and an easy truce
Sol slips behind the trees; the empty sky

Takes little note and fades among the stars
The summer grass is tired, but, bravely green,
Hosts cricket games for pouncing cats and dogs
Points cheered by choirs of cicadas and frogs

This is the thinking time. The book’s at rest
Unread, face down upon a lichened bench
While votive fire glows in its copper bowl
And dryads whisper in the gathering dusk

Ancestors seem to gather round, to mark
The changing seasons on their holy earth
And tho’ their tread no longer makes a sound
Their merry tales more remembered than heard

Their happy presence in the first-star-hour
Reminds us that whatever-was remains
And will remain until the calling of time

Saturday, August 31, 2019

We Have No King but Narcissus - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com



We Have No King but Narcissus

                                               …he doth bestride the narrow world
                                               Like a Colossus, and we petty men
                                              Walk under his huge legs and peep about
                                              To find ourselves dishonorable graves

-Julius Caesar I.ii.135-138

Our Caesar telephones, and missiles rain
Kalashnikov now rules our streets and schools
Warrantless searches on the Amtrak train
Cabinetlings squatting on specimen stools

And we are urged to clench our fists and shout
In ordered, servile choreography
To bring his family coup d’etat about
Through well-surveillanced demagoguery

Our master baits the poor Constitution
Groaning while grasping his moral pollution

Friday, August 30, 2019

King Henry V and Traditional Norman Entertainments - Rhyming Doggerel

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

King Henry V and Traditional Norman Entertainments

Henry V II.i.47ff

For supper Lord Cambridge was given a chop
The very meal Lord Masham was dreading
Northumberland was carved in that very same shop -
What Norman doesn’t enjoy a lovely beheading?

Thursday, August 29, 2019

The Potential for a Potentially Potential Hurricane Season - weekly column

Lawrence Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com

The Potential for a Potentially Potential Hurricane Season

I love Nature partly because she is not man, but a retreat from him.
None of his institutions control or pervade her.

-attributed to Henry David Thoreau

The buzzy words this hurricane season are the noun “potential” and its adverb “potentially.” In Latin “potential” means powerful; in modern English the meaning has drifted into a consideration of the possible. In Latin a potential storm is one that is powerful; in English a potential storm is not a storm at all but rather a weather disturbance that might become a storm.

We haven’t yet read a sentence such as “The potential hurricane is potentially heading for a potential landing on Florida’s cost,” but we might before the season is over. “Potential” is The Word; you are not going to see or hear the weather news this year without the speaker casting it about like pixie dust: “Potentially you are not going to potentially see or hear the potential weather news without the potential speaker casting it potentially about like potential pixie dust.”

Weather Underground (I don’t think they are really underground) came up with a fresh storm metaphor this year, “muscling,” as in “Hurricane Dorian is muscling its way to Florida.” That’s pretty good the first few hundred times you hear it.

Otherwise, the weather news is clotted with the same old metaphors about storms making landfall, brewing in the Gulf, building up steam, storming ashore (because, after all, storming is what storms do), lashing, pounding, barreling, reducing to rubble, battening down the hatches, wreaking havoc, leaving swaths of destruction, trees snapping like matchsticks, cars tossing around like toys, cities dodging the bullet, a street looking like a war zone, we’re not out of the woods, the eerie calm before the storm, the eerie calm in the eye of the storm, the eerie calm after the storm, perfect storm, storm of the century, in the crosshairs, fish storm, decimated, ground zero, and on and on.

Mother Nature’s Wrath and Mother Nature’s Fury used to be part of the babble, but no more. We have progressed from Greco-Roman mythology about nature goddess to Renaissance obsessions with witches. Someone must be blamed for hurricanes, and now the fault is beastly climate-change deniers instead of goddesses.

Climate-change deniers? Really?

As Henry David Thoreau said, “The wind that blows is all that anyone knows.”

-30-

The Veterans' Administration Thanks You for Your Service (Now Shut Up and Go Away)

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

The Veterans’ Administration Thanks You for Your Service

(Now shut up and go away.)

Rarely do they murder us
Mostly they just ignore us

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Lady Macbeth's Advice to Young Men Contemplating the Holy and Honourable Estate of Matrimony - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Lady Macbeth’s Advice to Young Men Contemplating
the Holy and Honourable Estate of Matrimony

Okay, yeah, sure, a little domestic strife
A resume written with a big ol’ knife
But if you want to get ahead in life
Even a king should listen to his wife

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

Luna-Dog and I - doggerel indeed!

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Luna-Dog and I

She gently takes the proffered nibbly bite
Between her toothful jaws, my little ally
This is our bedtime custom every night
That’s why my dog is fat - and so am I!

Monday, August 26, 2019

"Straight Pride Event..." - couplet

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

“Straight Pride Event Draws LGBTQ+ Protests”

-headline

What’s important?



Young lovers soaring through a Neverland night
Savouring each other in sweet delight

Sunday, August 25, 2019

"The Queen Stands at Your Right Hand, Arrayed in Gold" - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

"The Queen Stands at Your Right Hand, Arrayed in Gold"

-Psalm 45

The Queen stands at His right hand, arrayed in gold
The Queen is not ornamented in gold
The Queen is not decorated in gold
The Queen is not merely costumed in gold

The Queen is royally arrayed in gold
For She alone is the Theotokos
In Whose honor the sun is given to shine
Through Her, the Passage between worlds

The Light of the world is the Saviour indeed:
The Queen stands at His right hand, arrayed in gold

Cf:
Psalm 45
St. Gregory Palamas, Homily 38

Talibanning Ourselves - Weekly Column

Lawrence Hall
Mhall46184@aol.com

Talibanning Ourselves

Our North American Taliban are again attempting to destroy history.

Last week Mexico City’s Angel of Independence (https://theculturetrip.com/north-america/mexico/articles/9-fascinating-facts-about-mexico-citys-angel-of-independence/) was grotesquely vandalized by the usual protestors with the usual spray paint in scrawling the usual obscenities. The pretext for the desecration was gender-based violence. The irony of a sacred cultural marker celebrating freedom for all being defaced by a mob is an irony.

The peace-loving protestors also assaulted television reporters covering the demonstration, beating one unconscious. While protesting violence.

The monument dates from 1910 and celebrates Mexico’s independence from Spain. From a large base a pillar rises to a statue of Father Hidalgo, whose Grito de Dolores (http://www.sonsofdewittcolony.org/adp/archives/documents/hidalgo.html) on 16 September 1810 commenced the revolution against colonial rule. At the very top of the monument is a winged Nike (the Greek goddess of victory, and if she were real she’d probably fry everyone for mispronouncing her name) holding a crown of laurels, symbolizing martyrdom and victory.

One of the images is of an Irishman, William Lambert, Guiellen de Lampart, who is said to be one of the several inspirations for Zorro because of his participation in the early struggles for independence. The Spanish government had some hard feelings about this and executed him by burning in 1659.

Within the base are buried heroes of the revolution, including Father Hidalgo, Guadalupe Victoria (the first president), Leona Vicario, and her husband Andrés.

The Angel of Independence is a visual history lesson featuring images of heroes of Mexico, a child leading a lion, and, among many other statues and devices, four women at the four points of the base, symbolizing Law, War, Justice, and Peace. The Angel is a big deal (as in BIG DEAL), and before her and around her families take quinceañera pictures, footer fans celebrate victories, protestors protest, speeches are made, and independence is celebrated.

The Angel of Independence represents the noblest aspirations of humanity, and anyone who would deface her represents nothing more than a temper tantrum.

The destruction of culture, the suppression of free speech, and the attempted erasure of history are features of Nazism, Communism, and Taliban-ism, and are unworthy of anyone with any claim to love the Platonic ideals of the good, the true, and the beautiful.

If we disagree with a writer’s book we write our own book countering it.

If we dislike a statue’s implied message we place a different statue with a different message in the same park.

If we disagree with a speaker we listen and then against his thesis propose a reasoned antithesis.

If we don’t like a newspaper’s views we subscribe to another newspaper.

If a television program promotes content we want to spare our children then we switch channels or, better, turn the darned thing off and turn the kidlets to the bookshelves in the living room.

The recent ugly rise of burning, banning, censoring, and silencing of art, music, literature, and political discourse, always in the name of a purported higher cause, is not what any nation’s constitution is about.

-30-




Saturday, August 24, 2019

Ransomware Never Crippled Who We Were - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com


“Ransomware Cripples Cities”

-a common headline

Ransomware never crippled an Olivetti
But a broken spring did so once or twice
So I carried the old machine to old Bill
Whose magic always made it fly again

Ransomware never crippled a cardboard file
Nor yet the flyleaf of the book in which
She wrote the kindest sentiment of love
In the sweet optimism of our youth

Ransomware never crippled who we were -
I did that to us when I walked away

Friday, August 23, 2019

Rib Cage in the Road - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Rib Cage in the Road

A fuzzy structure there beside the road -
It proves to be the rib cage of the dead
Which nights before enclosed the heart and lungs
Of a creature on its errands dutiful

Gone now to buzzards and bacterial decay
On this, neither the Road to Damascus
Nor to Emmaus, and the Good Samaritan
Could have done nothing had he come along

It sinks into the dust, and so will we
Beneath the tire-treads of mortality

Thursday, August 22, 2019

"I Am the Chosen One" - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

“I Am the Chosen One”

-The King of Israel,
the Second Coming of God,
and Member of the Order of the Purple Heart
21 August 2019

No
No, no
Oh, no
Now please
Just go

Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Inbox / Sent / Spam / Trash - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

Inbox / Sent / Spam / Trash

Inbox:
Messages and pictures suddenly appear

Sent:
And others then are made to go away

Spam:
And here - oh, my! - delete (goodbye, my dear!)

Trash:
And is all this how we should pass each day?

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

I Do Not Want to be One of The People - poem

Lawrence Hall
mhall46184@aol.com

I Do Not Want to be One of The People

“He’s an individual, and they’re always trying.”

-The Colonel in Many Happy Returns, episode 7 of The Prisoner

I do not want to be one of The People
With nose rings and tattoos, tee-shirts, knee pants
Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck on the radio
Foul fungal feet and toes shoved into flops

I do not want to be one of The People
A howling face in an anonymous mob
With a Kalashnikov and ammo drum
A made-in-China heel-spurred baseball ap

I do not want to be one of The People
And so…