23rd & 24th December, 2004

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rod in “The Best is Yet to Come” 11/6/04
Photo by Shira Greenburg ©2004 by Broadway.com. Used by Permission

A Thought for Today

Life is too short not to believe in Santa Clause.

 

FROM the¨BOOKS

TWO POEMS from SUSPENSION BRIDGE

Fun at the Fair / for Aram Saroyan

The night’s an attic
to the bedroom earth.
To know our worth we need
the hike upstairs
               and to the basement, too.
What comes and goes
on stairways, stairwells?
                           Only life.
Those who will not take the time
to traverse, trip, trot on
will miss not just the eagle
but the eagle’s song.

So swift a piece of life,
so slight a thing
we are today, tomorrow,
not what tomorrow brings.

The poet stumbles, gets up
runs to find his catch up time–
he is the mystic warrior
                      in the underbrush.

The general dies a martyr,
and poet dies a pauper
and in-between the in-betweens
are led off to the slaughter.

All life is after life
and we are marking time,
while time, that rural enemy,
has marks on each of us
                (birth and brand).
The fortuneteller’s lifeline
the gimmick drawn on every hand.

Ah, but there is fun
not merely melancholy
to be found at every fair
a hopscotch smear on city sidewalks,
a defrocked millionaire caught
with his pants down ‘round his ankles.

The sanctity of Santa Clauses
invaded by the baron on the hill
amuses us until we need
Saint Nicholas ourselves.


Holly from Above / for Dean Ekdahl

A capital view of holly trees
green laurel and the plum
as we glide low and nearly slam a fence.
Holly from the top is scarecrowlike
all jagged edges reaching out
                      to paw the air.
Such a prickly Christmas stuff
with not the symmetry of evergreen
or stately stationary pine,
it is as if a vine pushed on its own
away from fence or trellis
and went seeking clouds
only to be toed down flat
                   by heaven’s foot.

Laurel is laurel, I’ll give it that
               and plum proud plum
but none could see
a holly tree from up above
and honor it with carols.

This dwarf not even good enough
for larger trees to squat upon
is barbed wire sure as metal
                 intertwined with spikes,
the likes of it no different from
tacks scattered to ensnare
                        the nighttime bandit.

Rest on, you gentlemen too merry
to observe the upper half
                    of holly branch
before you placed it on the altar
                         of a mass for Christ.

Some beauty stops
on anything dark green in color,
but holly should have been
               Good Friday flower,
a wreath of it a simile
                  for crown of thorns
with berries to remind us of the blood
that dripped from off His head
to shoulder, then to ground.

Holly seen from eighty-foot balloon
                                      descending
stands out as verdant vine
to top off crucifixions.

-from In Someone’s Shadow, 1984 with revisions 12/19/2004

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notable birthdays

Thursday 23 December

Chet Baker o Robert Bly o Jose Greco o Harry Guardino o Corey Haim o Tim Hardin o Elizabeth Hartman o Paul Hornung o Floyd Kaiber o Susan Lucci o Connie Mack o Buzz Miller o Ruth Roman o Vincent Sardi, Sr. o Helmut Schmidt o Joan Severance o Harry Shearer o Eddie Vedder o Madame C.J. Walker

Friday 24 December
Christmas Eve

Noelle Adams o Jill Bennett o Kit Carson o Ruth Chatterton o Mary Higgins Clark o Mike Curb o Ava Gardner o Johnnie Gruelle o Carol Haney o Howard Hughes o Robert Joffrey o Ricky Martin o Jonas Mekas o I.F. Stone o Mark Valley o Harry Warren o Franz Waxman

Rod's random thoughts Holidays were meant for lonely people. I always meet the best of them when holidays are near.

Love is such an unusual and complete gift no one can write a proper thank you note for receiving it or praise it enough for what it really is.

You don’t have to be on line to be in step.

CHRISTMAS WITH THE MASSES /
The 1961 Christmas Card

I spent Christmas with a cinder in my eye,
watching a priest eat a hot dog on Sixth
                                            Avenue
                            between masses.

Fifth had store windows
with imitation trees and imitation holly
and imitation women walked on the arms
of men with imitation smiles.

My mother gave me five saints’ names
         in hopes I’d be protected
but the enemy’s so silent
I wouldn’t know him if he came.

Smitten by the robber or the robber’s smile
I’d most likely turn the other cheek.
Like hell I would.

But forgive me my trespasses
       they’ve been few this year
(unless you count the time
I crossed Sixth Avenue against the light
In order that I might be blessed
between the mustard and the relish.)

-from “The Twelve Years of Christmas,” 1969

 
© 1961, 1969, 1984, 2004 by Stanyan Music Group & Rod McKuen. All Rights Reserved
Webmaster: Ken Blackie o Birthday research by Wade Alexander, coordinated by Melinda Smith
Poetry from the collection of Jay Hagan o Sound & Fury: Dr. Eric Yeager o Editor at Large: Bruce Bellingham
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