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Letters to Ming

OTHER POINTS OF VIEW


A Midwinter’s Tale

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February, 2002 through the present.

POEMS by Keith Hays
©

A DAUGHTER AND HER DADS

The flowers once gay have wilted and died,
Green sod turned yellowed and browned,
The echoes of volleys have faded away,
On the air with Taps mournful sound.

His mother wants to think he died a hero,
His father wants to think he stood to fight,
Like John Wayne in the Sands of Iwo Jima,
Not sitting in a bar one Saigon night.
click here for entire poem

HAIFA STREET
January 27, 2007
Just a walk in the sun and the sun is hot,
The street is empty but the air is not,
The scene ain’t real it’s a movie plot Cling to that thought, it’s all you got.
click here for entire poem



OUTA GAS
May 2, 2006 - With apologies to the Kingston Trio and the MTA
(sung to The Wreck of Old 97)

Poor Charlie drove up with his tank on empty,
And his Master Card in his hand,
He got in line with the yellow Humvee,
That he drove all over this land.
The radio was tuned to the Fox News Station
And he heard the President say,
You’re addicted to oil and I can’t help you,
You’ll just have to pay and pay.
click here for entire poem

MARDI GRAS
September 8, 2005

He lays there in the street
Slumber undisturbed by cars
His lips distorted in a rectos grin
Unblinking eyes open to the stars.
click here for entire poem

WAR CRY
September 30, 2004
A Gold Star hangs in the window,
A lead weight hangs from her heart,
She stands by the window just searching,
And waits for the music to start.
click here for entire poem

CONVOY
September 11, 2004
The sun and dust are welded into a crusty sheet.
That sticks upon your body in the vicious August heat,
And your joints are sore and shaken on the long road to Tikrit.
click here for entire poem

GOLD STARS
May 31, 2004
Somewhere a mother is sitting in sorrow,
Somewhere a father calls on God to say why,
Somewhere a daughter sobs over a picture,
Somewhere a son says that big boys don’t cry.
click here for entire poem


A TRAVELERS TALE
December 14, 2003
On the ancient road they travel from Baghdad to the west,
Where a hidden well of water spills from a wall of clay,
For centuries the caravans have paused to take their rest,
And camels watch their drivers as they eat and drink and pray.
click here for entire poem


CASUALTY OF WAR
July 17, 2003 -
He is someone’s son;
He is someone’s father;
A husband; a sweetheart;
A brother; an uncle;
A childhood friend;
And the kid who grew up down the block.
click here for entire poem


FACES - April 7, 2003
At one hundred nineteen tables,
Each one with an empty chair,
Families strain to see their faces,
But their faces are not there,
Never more will they grow older,
Never show the lines of age,
For their stories have been written,
And the Reader turned the page.
click here for entire poem

THE MEDAL
The day he enlisted he was just seventeen,
The judge had convinced him to be a marine,
“You better sign up, son, cause if you do not.
You are going to prison for selling that pot.” click here for entire poem

TAPS
It’s body bags and busted dreams,
And torn flesh and anguished screams,
Not hearing the bugle loud and clear,
On Veterans Day again next year.
click here for entire poem


THE KING'S SHILLING

Step to the drum and pick up your shilling,
Step over there and just stand and wait,
You're now in the Army you poor sod recruity,
So keep your lip buttoned you'll soon know your fate.
click here for entire poem

ON PARADE                           
Somewhere East of Suez,                   
In a dusty village street                         
The dogs snap sharply at their fleas      
And sheep commence to bleat.          
click here for entire poem  

ON PATROL
Out here in the boonies prowling on patrol,
We don't stop moving to call out the roll,
We know how many we're supposed to be,
The driver, and the sergeant, and the gunner and me
.
click here for entire poem
They will know where you are going.
They will know where you’ve been.
They will know what you read.
They will know what you said.
click here for entire poem

THE LIMBAUGH LINE

There’s a new dance craze. Going around these days, It’s so easy to do.
You don’t need no honey. Just bring some money, And you can do it too.
click here for entire poem
 


January 15, 2011
- She was born on the day that America suffered the attack that made 9-11 a watchword of our history; the day on which America marked the end of an aura of our invulnerability, September 11th, 2001. She died to become an icon in the violent history of America, killed in a fusillade that left 5 others dead and 14 others wounded including a Member of Congress. She was the youngest of the victims. She was Christina-Taylor Green, age 9.

She was the Pirates’ Second Baseman, the only girl on her Little League team. She comes from a baseball family. Her father scouts for the Dodgers. Her grandfather managed the Phillies to the World Championship in the 1980 Series. She told her father that she wanted to be the first woman to play Major League Baseball.

She picked blackberries in summer, her fingers stained purple in the summer sun. She sledded in the winter’s snows. Elected to her school’s student council she went with a friend to see her representative in Congress; to witness for herself the democracy she had studied in school; and with that visit she became at once the embodiment of our brightest hopes and of our deepest fears.

She was eulogized by a President of the United States. In a calm and quiet voice he told of a picture book that Christina had made and of the words she had written in it, “I hope you jump in rain puddles.” In my mind’s eye I saw again my own daughter on her way to school on a rainy spring day, dressed in a yellow slicker and big yellow boots that seemed too large. At each puddle on the sidewalk she would pause; survey it closely; and then jump to the center landing with both feet – just to watch the water splash. Then she would move on to the next puddle.

There is another image engraven in my mind – a misshapen head; narrow set and burning eyes; and a demonic grin. These two pictures contend for supremacy. One, of the best that is America. It is the image of the best of our aspirations; of our boundless curiosity; of the brightness of our future as a nation. The other, of the darkest of our fears; the alienation of our spirit; an image of hopeless apprehension in the darkest of nights. It is the image of America at its worst.

A century and a half ago another President from Illinois, lashed by bitter and warlike words, reached out in vain to his political adversaries and said, "We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature."

Christina-Taylor Green was one of those angels. Gabriella Giffords has been another. Let us be touched by them that we, and America, can become again united in the quest to become the best that we can be. May we always jump in rain puddles.

A Midwinter’s Tale
©2010 L. Keith Hays Champaign, Illinois

December 09, 2010 - That day he had walked in the alleys and side streets while others went in and out of the stores and restaurants on Main Street.  If any saw him they rapidly averted their gaze, not wishing to be reminded that there were among them those who lived in quiet desperation.   It was not the time to be reminded of unpleasant things.    It was a time to worship plenty; to proclaim the worthiness of success; to give enough that others might see in their gifts an expression of their comfortable condition.   Lest they be shaken in their enjoyment of the season the celebrants hurrying along chose not to see that upon which their eyes had fallen. 

So it was that the man had gone abroad unseen in the city, stopping at the closed back door of each establishment while others gaily went in the inviting entrances opening on Main Street.   Scraggly, greying hair peeked from beneath his once blue watch cap.  His beard, as scraggly as the hair of his head, was as grizzled and food stained at the corners of his mouth where dried crumbs clung.  He wore a blue windbreaker over a tattered plaid shirt that he had found somewhere.  Two pairs of trousers warded off the winter’s cold, the outer pair bound at his ankles with scraps of rope to keep the winds out.   A pair of cast off boots, two sizes too big, covered his feet.  Over it all a khaki trench coat belted tightly at the waist gave him the aspect of an overstuffed sausage.  He carried a backpack into which he had stuffed those things that he treasured; those things he had found; and those things to help him survive just one more day and one more night. 
 
It had started to snow.  The flakes clung to his watch cap and speckled his beard with white as he pulled aside the contents of the trash bin looking for a morsel.  He found a newspaper, barely soiled and folded neatly.   He took it, not to read for he had lost his glasses some time back and without them he could see only blurred dark lines contrasting with the grey of the paper on which they were inscribed.  He opened his trench coat, unzipped the windbreaker and smoothed the paper inside as one more layer of insulation to stand between his chest and the winter’s cold.
He had a name once.  It was hard for him to remember it for no one ever used it.  The Alley Man was what they called him for that was what he was - the man who lived in the city’s alleys.  He made a living from the city’s cast offs – those things that people used until they were tired of them and then threw away.  He lived by finding useless things and then using them to survive.  Indeed he, himself was one of the city’s cast offs – used up then thrown away.

The sun was fading, signaling the time at which the Alley Man must cease his search for sustenance and comfort such as it was and begin to look for shelter for the night.  He would find that too in the city’s alleys.  Sometimes he would find it under a stairway, sometimes under a thicket growing next to a building, and sometimes when the weather was mild simply under the heavens with a starry dome for a ceiling.  This night with the snow and the cold he would have to find a niche to shelter him from the wind’s teeth. 

The Bell Ringers had positioned their kettle strategically at the northeast corner of Main and State Streets, just a few feet from the wide steps that led to the imposing oak doors that opened into the sanctuary of the Presbyterian Church.  The shoppers streamed west on Main Street from past the appliance shop, past the church, and toward the Excelsior Department Store across State Street.

“Merry Christmas”, the Bell Ringers called, as coins and bills cascaded into their kettle.  “Thank You, Kindly”, greeted every contribution, “and a Happy New Year”.   The Ringers planned well for in a half hour, just at six, the Presbyterian’s evening service would begin just as it did on this night every year.  The church goers would be generous – to a degree – not wanting to be seen to be stinting at this time of year.  Many, who at other places and other times would have simply looked the other way and passed on would stop and dig into their pockets for a coin or two.  “Thank you, sir and a Merry Christmas to you and yours.”

The Alley Man found his shelter behind Lauderborn’s Appliance Store.  It was a cardboard covered crate in which the automatic washer-dryer that sat in the display window had been shipped.   It lay on its side next to the back door with the open bottom toward the church next door.  Tucking his backpack in the corner to serve as a pillow he crawled into the crate.  He found that if he lay diagonally on his side and drew his knees up toward his chest he could almost squeeze his whole body into the crate.   It would be cramped but at least it would keep the snow off and the wind away.

Just before he slipped off to sleep he could hear the notes of the organ coming from the Presbyterian Church.   “How nice”, he thought, “the folks at church are playing me off to sleep.”  He enjoyed music.  It brought back to mind a time when he had not been the Alley Man, a time when he could play, and sing, and make his own music just like anybody else.   He tried to lay hold to that memory but it slipped away.  He could not remember when it had been, and where, and even what they called him then.   Tonight he was only the Alley Man.  He fell asleep.

He did not know how long he slept; only that he woke in a violent shiver brought on by the intense cold.  He felt it to the bone, a cold reaching deep inside of him like an eagle’s talons grasping.  He lay there shaking and involuntarily extended his legs to ease the cramping at his knees.  As he did so it seemed he was no longer alone.  He was cradled in the bend of a strong arm while a cup of strong and warming broth was held to his lips.  He drank deeply and felt warmth course through him. He looked up at the face of the man who cradled him like a baby.  It was a strong face; a kind face with slate grey eyes that both looked deep within him and promised him kindness.   He wondered at the scratches on the man’s forehead.  Perhaps he had a kitten.   The Alley Man had a kitten once that scratched him, but that was long ago and he couldn’t remember the kitten’s name.

He felt a strong right hand stroke his forehead smoothing away the lines of care with a soft caress. He looked at the hand. There was a scab in the middle of its palm and what seemed to be dried blood.  Like the broth he had tasted, the touch gave him warmth and drove away the cold. He drifted off to sleep again; a deep and truly restful sleep; and as he did he heard the organ play again and the choir singing, “Hark, the Herald Angels Sing.”

“We found Lucas Matthews in the morning.  He had died during the night.  Of exposure the Medical Examiner said.  We knew him as the Alley Man.  We learned his name from the State issued Photo ID Card in his backpack. 

“It was a funny thing, Sargent.  He had a small Testament open in one hand with a finger of the other pointing to a verse.  We knew that it was his.  Inside the front cover someone had written, ‘Lucas Matthews on the occasion of his Confirmation.’  Even in death he wouldn’t let go of that book.

“What was strange was that inside that box where we found him there was no light to see by even with the sun up.  But there it was; that pointing finger as though he was following the words as he read them.  ‘Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men’.

“It is all in my report.”

Rubio, Rubio, Wherefore Art Thou, Rubio?

Novemeber 10, 2010 - Republican insiders have called him the Right’s Barack Obama and like the President his background speaks of what we call The American Dream. Like Obama he was not born with a silver foot in his mouth. He is articulate, personable and charismatic. Like the President he was born into modest circumstances. His father was a bartender who eventually owned his own bar. His mother was a hotel housekeeper in Las Vegas. He grew up in what might be called exotic circumstances by most Middle Americans – in Las Vegas and in the Cuban Exile community of Miami. Like the President he bounced from college to college after high school before obtaining his degree in Political Science from the University of Florida. After college he went to University of Miami’s Law School graduating cum laude in 1996. Rubio entered political life as a City Commissioner in West Miami then ran for and was elected to the Florida House of Representatives in 2000. His star in the State Legislature rose and he became Speaker of the House in the 2006-2008 session.......click here for entire article
November 3, 2010 - It is Wednesday morning, the day after Election Day 2010. The Republican Party will control the House of Representatives when it convenes in January. Harry Reid will still be the Majority Leader of the Senate although his party will enjoy only a bare majority. The Tea Party movement has proved its muscle in the Senate races of Kentucky and Florida but its candidate lost historically to a write in campaign in Alaska, undoing the Tea Party’s ouster of Senator Lisa Murkowski in the primary. In Delaware the house fell on the Witch of November and in Nevada the voters told Sharron Angle that they certainly knew the difference between Latinos and Asians. In Washington and Colorado incumbent Democrat Senators hold on to razor thin margins in races that remain too close to call. How much of the Republican gain is due to the activism of the Tea Party movement and how much is the result of the newly discovered 5-4 First Amendment Constitutional right of corporations to free spending speech is anybody’s guess......click here for entire article