His aunt wrote poetry for the neighborhood
newspaper. Her sister, his mother, used to
memorize poetry in school as they did back
in that day, but the poetry she quoted at
home, much to his dad’s chagrin, was not
from what she learned in school, but maybe
the playground of the 108th Street Christian
school. To wit: “Here I sit broken-hearted,
came to shit…but only farted.” “Jeanette,
knock it off. It’s not good for the boy’s
ears.” “Sonny boy, I have another one.”
“Okay, mom.” “No, Jeanette!” “I’ll tell you
after school before your father comes home.”
Guess what Sonny boy remembers from his youth?
Yes, the great, school yard poetry quoted by
Jeanette. “Oy!” said Sonny, the goy boy. His
mother would have said, “Nice rhyme, kid, but
you have to spice it up a bit,” and his dad
would have shouted, “Jeanette! Enough already.”
Monthly Archives: January 2016
Along the South Shore Line
They drove the back roads home
from Chicago, memories, history —
the 30’s, 40’s, 50’s.
He loves the Red Arrow,
the Blue Star and 12 and 20 —
memories a plenty.
Mom and dad and a stop at
the House of David baseball game,
it’s all gone but behind the wheel,
right there just the same.
He thought old Route 66 was fine
but there is nothing like
the memories on the roads
along the South Shore Line.
New Year’s Day, 2016
The motel was trashed.
The Hispanic head of
maintenance whispered,
“All the blacks. The
police were called this
morning.” Oh, great,
the man thought to him-
self as he entered his
room. He said to the
maintenance man,
“Sure doesn’t help
the cause, does it?”
The maintenance
man didn’t under-
stand. And then the
man thought, this
lends itself so easily
to judgment, as in,
why can’t you help
me here? I’ve been
an advocate since I
was a kid, and then
he thought, who has
to meet whose expect-
ations? What about
all those white power
people — CEO’s,
Chairs of the Boards,
legislators who don’t
trash motels but trash
millions with the
tilted scales of justice?
Don’t worry about
your middle-class
values, bub, he thought
to himself, just be
thankful the room
is clean, which is
a kind of middle-
class value.
January 1, The Sun Shines
The first day dawned dark, damp,
gray, icy cold. Someone asked,
“Can you see the barren trees,
the crusted snow on the yard,
the dirty slush on the street?”
“Yes.” “Then the sun is shining.”