Friday, December 11, 2020

The Rural Electric Co-Op's Giant Christmas Tree - as a poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

The Rural Electric Co-Op’s Giant Christmas Tree

 

Christmas trees are a delight to a child

On the farm, situational poverty

In muck and filth, old coat against the cold

Finishing the milking long hours after dark

 

But to the east a Christmas tree, a hope

The electric co-op’s radio mast

Its guy wires strung with multi-colored lights

The North Pole must be something like that

 

Christmas trees are a delight to a child

And even more when the child becomes a man

Thursday, December 10, 2020

The Rural Electric Co-Op's Giant Christmas Tree - weekly column

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

 

The Rural Electric Co-Op’s Giant Christmas Tree

 

Christmas trees are a delight to a child, and when a man is old and can be a child again, even more delightful.

 

Our family’s farm was about three miles from town. We lived in what would now be called situational poverty, but most folks in the county were worse off. Some kids got bicycles for Christmas, for us it was socks and cap pistols and little tinplate toy trucks, and for many there was almost nothing. The post-war prosperity boom bypassed most of East Texas.

 

A few weeks before Christmas each year Father took us boys into the woods next to our land for the adventure of cutting the Christmas tree. In our informal squirrel hunts in the autumn we had scouted out likely trees, and now returned for the best of them, almost always a pine.  Finding it, cutting it down with the hatchet, and dragging it back to the house through the chill was a great adventure to be savored then and savored now in the remembrance.

 

Father stood the tree in a bucket of wet sand and anchored it with fishing line. He and Mother strung the big Noma™ lights and hung the precious glass ornaments, and then we children were at last given a box of tinsel each and permitted to fling the bright strands any way we wanted. What a mess! I realize now that after we went to bed Mother discreetly arranged the tinsel a little more artistically.

 

Farms in our school readers and in the movies were always bright and cheerful places, with happy cows and happy pigs living peaceful lives of prelapsarian fellowship. In reality a farm, especially in the winter, is brown and grey and mucky and smelly, and after their years of loyal service cows are prodded into a trailer, bellowing in fear, to be driven away to the slaughterhouse. Good ol’ Bessie, whom you raised from a calf, is now lunch.

 

Life on a farm is often grim.

 

Thus, a little pine strung with multi-colored lights and little figures and globes brought out once a year was magic.

 

Another magic Christmas tree was the huge one the local electric co-op built each year by stringing lights on their tall radio mast – tall enough to have red lights all year round lest the town doctor fly his airplane into it.

 

For weeks the far-away tree shone across the dark, frosty fields. A child imagined it to be a magic place, maybe even the North Pole itself.

 

Now the tower is gone, replaced by cell ‘phones and more modern radios, and the co-op decorates only a little tree out in front of the drive-by window. Still, it’s a Christmas tree, and good enough.

 

For Christmas the co-op gives employees, retirees, trustees, and others ham for Christmas. Because I serve on the scholarship committee I get a ham, which is not a Christmas tree but then you can’t eat a Christmas tree.

 

Scholarships for graduating seniors, Christmas hams for some, electricity for all, and a pretty good Christmas tree out front. What a wonderful institution our Rural Electric Co-Op is!

 

-30-

 

 

The Advent of Our Discontent - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

The Advent of Our Discontent

 

-As Shakespeare did not say

 

Everyone accuses everyone else

Of treason; they’d call each other Quislings

If they had any history, but they don’t

Only Hochhuth and Unferth on the air

 

But you and I have wood to split and stack

The garden to level and put to sleep

Cows to get up for the milking at dusk

And in the evening, a cozy fire to watch

 

Oh, listen to the migrating geese, up high!

Unlike us humans, they never learned to lie

Wednesday, December 9, 2020

We Are Afraid for Each Other - Poem

 

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

We Are Afraid for Each Other

 

We do not wear our masks against car keys

Or coffee cups or clocks or coins or books

Nor yet again in fear of paper clips

Or pocketknives or fountain pens or socks

 

We do not wear our masks against the sun

Or moon or stars or air or trees or flowers

Nor yet again in fear of autumn leaves

Or gentle rain or evening mist or dreams

 

We wear our masks because we are afraid

Of being humans, of loving each other

 

NB: This is NOT a plea for unmasking. The fear is of hurting others. Wear your mask. Wearing a mask protects others. Wearing a mask is love. It’s not about you; it’s about protecting MeeMaw.

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

A Midnight Appointment of Shame - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

A Midnight Appointment of Shame

 

“Where greed is an ape and pride is an ass”

 

-Chesterton, The Ballad of the White Horse

 

You poor man –

 

You are not the first to use Truth as a spade

With which to dig for yourself mouth-honors and wealth

A tyrant piped, and now you dance for him

His toy, his poppet, his puppet, his pet

 

You poor man –

 

Who pottage-messed stout honesty for toys

To descend in a brazen elevator

To an evil that didn’t even have to try

For you were so eager to go to it

 

You poor man –

 

You poor, poor man: the cock will not crow for you -

You have betrayed only your wretched self

 

 

https:///www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/President Donald J. Trump Announces Intent to Appoint the Following Individuals to Key Administration Posts | The White House-120320/

Monday, December 7, 2020

The Man Who Delivered the Movies - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

The Man Who Delivered the Movies

 

The Saturday afternoon matinee

Outside the Palace Theatre in a line

Impatient for the hour, the man, John Wayne

Air-conditioning, popcorn, Coca-Cola, escape

 

Then riding to the rescue of the ranch

The man who delivered the reels of fun

Running up the steps with a big grey case

Of Rio Bravo – he brought us our dreams

 

And did he know, speeding to little towns

That he too was a hero of the Golden West?

Sunday, December 6, 2020

Let There be Barbies - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Let There be Barbies

 

Let the children have their night of fun and laughter.

Let the gifts of Father Christmas delight their play.

 

-Churchill, Christmas Eve radio address, 1941

 

Some young mothers ban Barbies and Santa Claus

And all such trinkets and dolls and mummeries

Sacrificing childhood to fashionable gossip -

In obedience to the Holy Internet

 

A toy Cochise must never ride again

Or little plastic soldiers defend their forts

Or Maid Marian roam with Robin Hood –

Barbie must never be dressed for success

 

Little children must now sit on the floor

On Christmas morn to play with ideologies

Saturday, December 5, 2020

DaddyPaw's Letters from the CCC Camp - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

DaddyPaw’s Letters from the CCC Camp

                           For George (“DaddyPaw”) Hargrove, Hebo Ogden Hall,

And all Who Served in the Civilian Conservation Corps, 1933 - 1942

He found his DaddyPaw’s young adulthood

In a box of letters from New Mexico

About fighting forest fires and building fence

To the stockyards at Magdalena

 

“The peas must be coming in by now,” he writes

“Are yall getting enough to eat? How’s my dog?

I’ve got swell friends but I sure wish I was home.

And did yall get the five dollars I sent?”

 

We stand in reverence of a generation

Who almost never had enough to eat

Thursday, December 3, 2020

Hospital Waiting Room in Advent - weekly column

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

 

Hospital Waiting Room in Advent

 

“How could I bear a crown of gold when the Lord bears a crown of thorns? And bears it for me!”

 

-Heilige Elisabeth von Thuringen

 

The pre-dawn parking-lot is crowded enough, and almost pretty with the high orange-ish light reflecting nicely on the rainy pavement. The cold wind blows a lonely paper cup along among the puddles and the cars with the more-than-one-family-members dozing or reading their MePhones. It seems as if the world itself is a waiting room for now.

 

In the lobby a queue forms, everyone standing six feet away from each other as ordered by plastic signs on the floors. A cheerful-enough volunteer aims a little plastic gun at each human head as it passes, and asks each owner of a head DO YOU HAVE ANY SYMPTOMS DO YOU HAVE A SORE THROAT HAVE YOU BEEN AROUND ANYONE WITH THE CORONAVIRUS HAVE YOU BEEN OUT OF STATE RECENTLY

 

Does Louisiana count?

 

Pass, friend.

 

A cold and fashionable Christmas tree obscures an image of Saint Elizabeth of Thuringen next to the row of elevators marked ‘B’ along a covid-silent corridor.  She ministers to the poor and ill as she always has, and the medical and support staffs of the hospital do the same, under her support and patronage.

 

A visitor with his mask and his pass can hear his footsteps echoing-echoing as he passes through the silences, and read signs announcing activities scheduled long ago that were canceled long ago because of the lockdowns. Only rarely will he see a masked and gowned figure seemingly scuttling into hiding while carrying a tray of lab specimens or pushing a cart or whispering into an official glowing screen.

 

Doors that used to be open are secured with NO ENTRY or STAFF ONLY signs, and former passages are blocked with new plywood panels or panes of clear plastic in this unclear time.

 

The cardiovascular ICU waiting room is empty – ONE FAMILY MEMBER ONLY, reads a sign scotch-taped to a door, and NO COFFEE BECAUSE OF THE CORONAVIRUS YOU WILL FIND COFFEE IN THE CAFETERIA announces another. Some seats are marked off-limits with yellow crime-scene-ish tape even though there is no one in the room to be made off-limits. The television is dark and silent, the floors and plastic chairs are clean-upon-clean from repeated daily wipings and scrubbings and sprayings although almost no one ever goes to that room now. There are no people, no magazines, no bottles of water, nothing in the litter baskets. It’s like a scene from one of those Star Trek episodes in which an away-team beams down to a deserted space ship, a deserted city, or a deserted planet, only there is no thematic background music in the hospital.

 

This is the block of floors and space given over the cardiac care and surgery; the areas where CV patients are treated are hidden behind doors and walls and faces of appropriate secrecy and discretion.

 

Behind those doors and walls life and death are worked out through the work and thought and education and brilliance and industry of so very many health care workers, from physicians to the nice fellow with the bucket and mop, and through the mysteries of God and His saints.

 

As for our visitor, he can do nothing but take a seat – one without the yellow crime-scene-ish tape – and wait in silent prayer for one he loves.

 

-30-

 

 

Video Mass in Lockdown - Jesus and the 502 Bad Gateway - a poem (of sorts)

Lawrence HallMhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Video Mass in Lockdown - Jesus and the 502 Bad Gateway

 

NOTE: We apologize for the technical

Difficulties. The Mass for today, Saturday,

504 Error, will be available below

at 11:00am ET. In real time

 

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Wednesday, December 2, 2020

Charming Murderers - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Charming Murderers

 

I have met murderers of wit and charm

And saints who were crude and vulgar and coarse

I feared the saints would do me greater harm -

I don’t know what any of this means, of course

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

They are Disinfecting Venice - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

They are Disinfecting Venice

 

I have been trying to find out; no one will tell me the truth; they are

disinfecting Venice. Do you know why?

 

-Death in Venice

 

We live on islands in the virus-time

Shored in by disease and uncertainty

Waves of uncertainty, rumor, and fear

The deaths of friends bumping against us at night

 

Delivery trucks are our vaporetti

Ferrying our supplies across the Styx

That separates our then away from now

With imaginings outsourced from Lethe.com

 

They are burning stimulus checks in the streets

To disinfect us against reality

Monday, November 30, 2020

Farewell to an Old Comrade - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Farewell to an Old Comrade

 

He yaf not of that text a pulled hen

That seith that hunters ben nat hooly men

 

-Chaucer, Prologue, 177-178

 

A man visits his pal in the hospice room

Two great old pals, best friends from boyhood

In school and in the Army together

Best men at each other’s weddings long ago

 

Hunting trips, laughter, campfires, and coffee

They tramped the woods and fields into old age

Until the arthritis house-bound them at last

But, peace:

A good man whispers farewell to his dying friend:

 

“I remember our tramps through the mists on the moors –

And can I have that fine old Purdey of yours?”

Sunday, November 29, 2020

The Turning of the World: Advent through Plough Monday - poem

 

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

The Turning of the World: Advent through Plough Monday

 

God spede the plough

 

-an English blessing for a good agricultural year,

numerous sources

 

In springtime Nature kisses the world with light

And summer follows with work and merriment

In autumn she kisses the world good night

And winter follows with frost and lament

 

But first we celebrate the great world’s turning

With Advent and the holy Christmas time

With liturgies followed by the Yule log burning

Through feasting and cheer, and each well-sung rhyme

 

Six midwinter weeks ‘til the Three Kings appear

And then Plough Monday to begin the new year

Saturday, November 28, 2020

Thanksgiving Dinner with Generous Helpings of Biological Functions - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Thanksgiving Dinner

with Generous Helpings of Biological Functions

 

Would you please pass the bowel-movement stories

Gosh, this lab-test casserole sure looks great

I love the well-steamed vasectomy glories

And a helping of dentistry on my plate

 

This year I fried the potassium levels

They taste as yummy as a cancer scare

And here’s heart surgery with our revels

For Christmas I’m getting a new potty chair

 

The kids have gone outside, oh what a fuss -

Why don’t they want to have dinner with us?

Friday, November 27, 2020

In Praise of a Candle - poem

 Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

In Praise of a Candle

 

These are thy gifts; they are good

 

-Saint Augustine, City of God, Book 15, Chapter 22

 

A votive candle is good, and prayers are good

And those for whom the candle is lit are good

Especially when they feel they are not good

Because they are His gifts, and they are good

 

When we light a candle for someone else

We light it for ourselves, all without knowing

In the workings of the Ekonomia

Because we are His gifts, and we are good

 

In spite of ourselves – we must accept it

As the little candle shines on through the night

Thursday, November 26, 2020

Homeschool, Screenschool, Noschool - weekly column

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

Poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Homeschool, Screenschool, Noschool

 

Pat Wheeler: “A game-legged old man and a drunk. Is that all you got?”

Sheriff John T. Chance: “That’s what I’ve got.”

 

-Rio Bravo

 

Today’s first lesson is that no such construct as “homeschool” obtains, either as a noun or as a verb. When your father taught you hunting safety he did not homeschool you; he taught you. If your sixth-grade teacher taught you not to spit tobacco into the classroom litter basket because your parents failed in their duty of teaching basic hygiene, manners, and dignity, he did not schoolhome you.

 

And, yes, when I first taught sixth grade the local customs of chawin’, dippin’, spittin’, and dying from mouth cancer in early adulthood came as a surprise.

 

We learn in all of life’s situations; we do not homelearn or schoollearn. After our first few encounters with our fellow pilgrims we also teach in all of life’s situations; we do not hometeach or schoolteach.

 

Thank you for your kind attention.

 

Today’s second lesson is about, oh, screenschooling, also known as distance learning or asymmetrical learning.

 

It’s not much good. That reality should have been learned (or schoolschooled) over ten years ago, when the fashion began: students in different towns are clustered before Orwellian telescreens while much time is wasted on several monitors in several different places try to make all the electronic mummery work.

 

And yet screenschooling might be metaphorical mannah in the CV desert – it’s not a steak dinner at Delmonico’s, but for a time of wandering it will have to do. As Sheriff Chance says, it’s what you’ve got.

 

The only way screenschooling can kinda / sorta work is for parents to be parents, to get the kidlets up on time, feed them breakfast, require them to dress in their school clothes, seat them at the kitchen table (not a couch or bed), and then supervise them while accomplishing other household chores.

 

And, anyway, aren’t there books and musical instruments and small animals and paper and pens and paintboxes and houseplants and tools and all the other appurtenances of civilization in your home now?

 

For now your children don’t have access to classrooms, school breakfasts, school lunches, laboratories, gyms, playing fields, structure, expectations, or game-legged old men.

 

What your children have now is you. Be the parent, not a roommate. To paraphrase Cole Thornton in El Dorado, don’t leave a boy alone at the kitchen table to do a man’s job.

 

-30-

 

 

Keats Helps Carry a Cat to the Veterinarian - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Keats Helps Carry a Cat to the Veterinarian

 

[I]f Poetry comes not as naturally as the Leaves to a tree it had better not come at all

 

-John Keats, Letter to John Taylor, February 27, 1818 1

 

The leaves come naturally from the trees today

As autumn floats away, onto the pages of life

Memories set down, one word at a time

Or phrases scribbled in heart-leaping haste

 

But in humility the poor poet perceives

That lines often don’t come naturally at all

Resisting as fiercely as hissing cats

Being crated for a trip to the vet

 

No

 

Poetry doesn’t come as easily as all that -

Come, Mr. Keats, and help me with this cat!

 

 

1 John Keats – "Keats's Axioms" -- Letter to John Taylor, February 27, 1818 | Genius

 

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Prien Lake, November 2020

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Prien Lake, November 2020

 

Waterfowl honk, quack, sing, and fish

Among floating insulation and foam

Near to the foundered wreckage of a boat

Along the shore, where sits a plastic chair

 

A discount-store throne in isolation

Set forth in rich, primeval mud where live

The little creatures whose logical end

Is in a fish or in a gumbo dish

 

A hurricane of hours is sorrow for years

In ancient, endless work, and occasional tears

Tuesday, November 24, 2020

All His Stuff is Monogrammed - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

All His Stuff is Monogrammed

 

The man of destiny considers his glass

Monogrammed with his manly initials

Next to his monogrammed bone china plate

And his monogrammed solid silver ware

 

The man of destiny checks his monogrammed watch

Gleaming in gold next to his monogrammed cuffs

Sitting in at his monogrammed office desk

Behind his monogrammed sitting-room door

 

And perhaps he gloats, at the very end:

“Look at all my monogrammed stuff!  I win!”

 

They say the Russians kept some of his teeth

Monday, November 23, 2020

A Lust-Crazed Darwinian - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

A Lust-Crazed Darwinian

 

Isaiah 11:6-9

 

Outside the window I see in the autumn oak

A face-off between a squirrel and a cat

Small cat. Large squirrel. Insults given and received

They would kill each other, just like humans

 

The Romantic wants to see them at play

The Darwinian wants to see who wins

And if the squirrel would eat the brains of the cat

Just as the cat would eat the brains of the squirrel

 

And leave little headless corpses on my porch

Which is why I am a hopeful Romantic

Sunday, November 22, 2020

A Busy Dachshund Puppy - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

A Busy Dachshund Puppy

 

She leaves you a gift on the kitchen floor

And another on the living-room rug

And barfs up half a frog just inside the door

And barfs again – a poorly-digested bug

 

She bites into cranky old Pepper-Cat’s tail

(Something so twitchy must surely taste good)

And Pepper-Cat spanks her; oh, what a wail!

(Dear pup, there’s a difference between could and should)

 

And in the evening, while you doze over a book

She rests upon your heart, and gives you that look

And her big eyes ask,

                                  Am I your very good dog?

 

Oh, yes

Saturday, November 21, 2020

For Presidents and Others - A Meditation on Aging Gracefully

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

When a Man is Old

 

For Presidents and Others:

A Meditation on Aging Gracefully

 

Now when a man is young, he gives his strength

In service to his nation and the Faith

In war and peace, and at his family hearth

In work, and in his humble place at Mass

 

But when a man his old, he then should choose

To ‘change his work for a good walking stick

And sit outside the Blue Boar Inn with pipe

And glass and friends and happy memories

 

There is honor in manly endeavors

And honor in finally letting them go

Friday, November 20, 2020

Barney Fife! Thou Shouldst be Living at this Hour - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

 

Barney Fife! Thou Shouldst be Living at this Hour

 

-as William Wordsworth did not say

 

Police chiefs are costumed as admirals these days

Or as generals, with medals and eagles and stars

Peaked caps and polished boots, more Patton than Patton

In stern command of parking-lot plywood lecterns

 

Their trousers are crisply pressed, as are their frowns

And all their seams line up with military precision

Each gold and silver button polished as befits

Leaders formidable to civilization’s foes

 

And thus they appear, gloriously attired

Explaining to their people why they’ve just been fired

 

 

(I admire police - beat cops, the proper coppers - but the resume’ builders who rise to high office and dress up like Hohenzollern postal clerks are another matter.)

 

Thursday, November 19, 2020

A Miracle of Second Sight - weekly column

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

 

A Miracle of Second Sight

 

Sight is a miracle. Sight restored is even more so.

 

Last week I had occasion to drive a friend to his ophthalmologist in Lake Charles, Louisiana.

 

I was worried about the sudden deterioration in eyesight (he seemed to be calmer about it, but then he is quietly devout and a better man than I), and grew more worried as the afternoon wore on in the doctor's waiting room, but finally he appeared. The ophthalmologist had made a diagnosis and performed the unplanned laser surgery then and there,

 

We drove away, my friend in those funny black plastic eyeshades, and searched out road coffee for the drive back to Texas.

 

The first chain fast-food place we found still wore its building sign but was wrecked and boarded up.

 

The second place, the same.

 

The third was a hit, although we had to navigate around a truck and crew lifting up a new sign. That’s what you see in Lake Charles this autumn, the restoration of signs, along with continued cleanup. Lake Charles is still a mess after two major hurricanes this summer, with wreckage everywhere, street signs gone, houses blasted and empty, shops blasted and empty, work crews and volunteers along some streets, nothing along others. 

 

As we sat at a window table with our coffee I noticed that my friend’s eyes were no longer dilated, and suggested that he try to read something. So he lifted his paper cup to his eyes and with great joy read a famous text of our time, “Warning. Contents may be hot.”

 

And my friend’s eyesight grew better by the minute. Wonderful!

 

When I walked him into the opht…hmmm…eye doctor’s office he could not see. When he walked out three hours later he could.

 

Miracle. Laser surgery. Miracle. Ophthalmologist. Miracle.

 

A humorous bit is that on the way my friend was remonstrating with me for missing turns: "Can't you see the sign? I can't see the signs, but I'm blind!"  In the event, I could not see the road, street, and advertising signs because most of them had been blown away by the hurricanes and some had not yet been restored.  Our conversation, then, was much like the two elderly gentlemen on a train in a Jeeves and Wooster story:

 

1st Gent: "I say, is this Wembley?"

 

2nd Gent: "No, this is Thursday."

 

1st Gent: "So am I - let's have a drink!"

 

Life is good.

 

Peace,

 

-30-

What I Found While Cleaning a Faeries' Well - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

What I Found While Cleaning a Faeries’ Well

 

Perhaps it was because I cleared the vines

The ancient vines, with tools of iron, of steel

And traced the circles of the well’s lost lines

With my unhallowed hands, by touch and by feel

 

Or that I wore my boots, or forgot my prayers

To the White Lady said to haunt this place

Or whistled secular songs, careless airs

Until the dusk, when I came face-to-face…

 

I have lived to tell of this wildest of adventures

I found on the lichened stone – a set of dentures

 

 

Despite my disapproval of exposition:

 

Until we became Roman and respectable, my Celtic and English ancestors made offerings at sacred wells associated with pixies and fairies and a mysterious White Lady, or Sheela na Gig.

 

I regret that the old well in my yard, the surviving structure from an old farmstead, is probably not a sacred well, or at least no more than any other well. While I was cleaning away the English ivy (which in English folklore binds lovers), I found on the edge of a brick a denture plate from years ago.

 

When I have finished cleaning the well, covering it with a sturdy concrete disc for safety, and topping it with a wrought-iron arch, I will add a crucifix.

 

I hope the resident Sheela / White Lady won’t mind.

 

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Only my Friend has his Vision Again - poem

 

A Loss of Vision

 

As we grow older we grow honester,

that's something.

 

-Yevtushenko, “Zima Junction”

 

I drove a friend to his ophthalmologist

When I walked him into the office

He could perceive only light and shadow

After we left, some four hours later

 

He could read the fine print on his McDonald's coffee cup

 

Miracle. Laser surgery. Miracle.

 

The McDonald's was our third place to try

For coffee; the first two chains were empty and wrecked

Lake Charles is still a mess after hurricane-curses

This summer, with wreckage everywhere, street signs gone

 

Houses blasted and empty, shops blasted and empty

Work crews along some streets, silence along others

 

Dear Leader never bothered to notice

The new Dear Leader won't bother to notice

They send our children overseas to bomb people

And build them new infrastructure and then

 

Bomb everything again

 

We are trying to be good Americans

Our golf-course presidents and

Keyboard-kommando generalissimos

And feeble Merovingian Congress

 

Fist-bump each other

 

Only my friend has his vision again