MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
At Mother's house in late October
We parceled out all the mementos;
I found the Stevenson banner I had
Removed from the '56 convention hall.
Al Lowenstein helped me grab
the banner---he, a dangerous radical.
surreptitiously telephoned E. Roosevelt
from a stranger's suite we had commandeered.
(How else could two Yalies on leave
Be expected to meet their travel needs?)
That alternate delegate from Missouri
never did re-appear.
Fifty years brings us to our present lot,
Quizzical shift for y'all since Adlai and Ike;
The idea of salvation through lesser despots
Leaves me with a spot of melancholy.
I miss my parents and the roaring fifties:
The revival tents we thought so obscure;
The windswept rides in our convertibles;
Hate speech: "We killed ya'll's football team";
Drugs: "He drank a coke with an aspirin."
Mother, I threw the banner into the trash bin,
And we've gotten rid of those '57 tail fins;
Once the meanings have died in your mind,
There is no point in keeping such finds.
Note: Some years back I faxed this poem to a village newspaper on a tony island retreat where I was the guest of some friends. About four minutes later a black Crown Victoria buzzed the house, a car window rolled down and my license plate noted. It turns out it was the secret service detail of our national dynastic family who were luxuriating nearby. I have nothing against proper security but to this day I can't send a fax without wondeing if my line is being monitored.
Comments
"Once the meanings have died in your mind,
There is no point in keeping such finds."
A killer of a last line ... Beautiful piece of writing, Oxy.
by MrSmith1 on Sat, 12/31/2011 - 4:41pm
Thanks, Mr. Smith. Your haikus have been an inspiration. Happy New Year.
by Oxy Mora on Sat, 12/31/2011 - 6:24pm