Sunday, December 2, 2018

Book Samples


Minnesota (The 32nd State, 1858)

Its people are a northern breed,
with elements of Norse and Swede,

where natives love lutefisk and lefse,
will say “Uff da” and “Yah, you betcha,”

and strangely find deep snow and ice
is no big deal and maybe nice!

Ten thousand lakes means lots of fish,
which explains a favorite wish:

here up Nort’ to be a winner
means you caught walleye for dinner!

We will find the landscapes varies
from woods and hills to great wide prairies,


and from the Range to Lake Calhoun—
delights to fill three months of June!

Now here for you is my short test—
“Which Twin City is the best?”

You may think hard— you may think long—
And half the state will say, “You’re wrong!!”




1818

That year, Mary Shelley (nee Wollstonecraft Godwin)
was in the midst of what we’d call a bad patch:
at nineteen she had already buried two babies with two
more deaths to follow.  Orphaned at her own birth, she
was no stranger at funerals, and everyone around her
seemed in peril: she lost friends, and before long,
her husband, but she gave birth to a book called
Frankenstein, a tale still alive two centuries later,
and the world still wonders how this precocious author
caught a glimpse of the atom and DNA so many years
before the rest of us.    
                                    There was a genuine Prometheus
around, and a few months later he introduced his
Grand Sonata for Hammerklavier in B Flat Major,
which mystified Europe for the rest of the century,
and from the first was declared unplayable.  The maestro,
by now inured to controversy, was untroubled. He had
never allowed the needs of his music to bow to the frailty
of human fingers or breath, and now an elderly 48,
and securely sentenced to the land of the deaf, Beethoven
sat serenely at his Broadwood piano and moved his hands
across the keys, making sounds that he heard only
in his imaginings.
                                 In our infant empire John Q. Adams
began a brilliant tenure at the State Department
and found some unfinished business in that last corner
of eastern real estate not yet securely in the Republic,
Spanish Florida.  Jackson was sent off to rattle the saber,
and the Spanish decided to sell rather than fight,
earning Old Hickory laurels he’d use to his advantage
when he and Adams squared off in the election of 1824.
The Secretary now moved on to the next pressing issue—
where Canada began and we ended, still unresolved
after two wars, and agreed to the Boundary Waters
and the 49th parallel, a decision still applauded
in our day when we feast on the walleye caught
in those brisk northern waters.  
                                                            Science could not sit still
while its lovely consort, Nature, continued to amaze:
Venus occulted Jupiter, the last time it would happen
before 2065, but hardly the last time that an agile woman
overshadowed a bully.  Off in the Paris laboratories
of the Ecole Polytechnique a chemist of great skill,
M. Louis Jacques Thenard, discovered hydrogen peroxide,
a chemical whose useful life still lay in the future.  What
Louis Jacques thought he might do with it I do not know,
but I am sure he did not envision me in the next century
watching it bubble and fizz over some cut or scrape,
before my mother put on the bandage, pronounced me fit,
and sent me back out to play.
    

  



Sunday, April 8, 2018

Missouri (The 24th State, 1821)



Forgive me if I’m in a hurry
to tell you all about Missouri!

It started as a trading post
perched along a river coast;

and then it hosted pioneers
on their way to wild frontiers—

that last is how we know it best—
our longtime Gateway to the West!

The world’s fair was a grand venue
where fast food made a great debut:

since then, the burger and the cone
have both become most widely known.

Its gifts to us have been quite plain—
fine souls like Truman and Mark Twain,

and then that sage of any era:
I speak of course of Yogi Berra,

and if you love a song and dancin’
then take yourself away to Branson!




Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Arkansas (The 25th State, 1836)



We learned in school that Arkansas
is pronounced to sound like jaw,  

and why it doesn’t rhyme with Kansas?
I would need a lot of stanzas!

It is the home of those grand Nine,
teen aged heroes who chose to shine,

who put to shame a hateful rule
by choosing where they went to school.

For visits it has all you’d wish:
trails to hike and lakes to fish;

agreed, there are no ocean waves,
but lots and lots of lovely caves;

and Mountain Home will warm your heart
with its array of great folk art.

Can any place be called divine—
whose chosen mascot is porcine?

But this state we shall not bash:
for it gave us Johnny Cash!



Thursday, January 11, 2018


Margaux of North Port

Not too far from old Key Largo
lives a stalwart Cairn named Margaux.

Like her hero, General Sherman,
she knows her job is chasing vermin:

she would give up her favorite pillow
just to catch an armadillo,

and often spends her afternoons
on guard against the local goons.

We’ve tried to offer recreation,
but she replies, sans hesitation,

“There is no way I can have fun
when I know the job’s not done!”

We’re sure the Scots are true die-hards
(it’s all recorded by their bards),

but still we send out this alert
as she goes on with all her work,

“Your tribe would never call you traitor
for passing on an alligator!”