Out In The Be-Bop Night- The Golden
Boy Orator Of The Flats
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
I first
heard about the golden boy orator of the flats (we’ll just call him golden boy
for short from here on in since no one ever called him anything else and
subsequent investigation never turned up any other name, Christian name,
anyway), Duffy O’Shea, from my grandfather who said that he had first heard him
over near the Park Street subway station in downtown Boston back in the 1930s
when he would roar like a lion about whatever was on his mind. In those days my
grandfather said what was on golden boy’s mind, what was on everybody’s mind
what with the Great Depression of the 1930s bothering everybody, was the evils
of capitalism, about how the working man was getting the short end of the
stick, about how the good citizens of Boston needed to rise up and smite old
Pharaoh, old Mister Greedy banker down on State Street, those old Satan Mayfair
swells who were having a good old time just up the street on the other side of
the State House on Louisburg Square and do it now. And while he held forth my
grandfather said you could hear a pin drop, his great mane of golden hair flowing
in the wind on Boston breezy days, his suit freshly pressed, his shoes brightly
shined. And when in good voice he sounded like some siren call from the depths
of Ireland and its eight hundred years struggle against the bloody British. Yes,
golden boy cut quite swath in those days while he was on his soapbox (literally
in those days when everyone who wanted to be orator had one, usually some old sturdy
unfinished throwaway produce box found down at Haymarket after the venders had
finished with them, in order to be heard and seen by the crowds as they formed
up for the daily class- war battles, class war on the edges of the Common).
My
grandfather, my maternal grandfather, Daniel Riley, no mean orator himself when
in the cups, and not a man to be easily impressed as I know from my own living
experience with him, would go on and on about how golden boy would take on all
comers when it came to it. See this was theater, street theater of a sort back
in those days when oratory skills were highly valued and when one who could use
those skills to effect could get a hearing, especially on Saturday and Sunday
afternoons when working people, mostly, would stroll through the Boston Common
listening to this one and that one spout whatever it was they wanted to spout.
And they would come and go, depending on the fashion, snake oil salesmen, magic
elixir guys, guys selling books of every
description for every remedy, women
standing up for some cause, or just ready to tell fortunes, it was all mixed
up, all mixed up except everybody always made sure that they stopped at the
golden boy’s soapbox, and if they were happy with what he said that day, or he
bested some heckler, or some has-been professional political shouter they might
drop a dime or two in his hat placed before the soapbox. See my grandfather said this is the way golden
boy, and other too, kept body and soul together during the 1930s, this was
their job.
Like I said before my grandfather said golden
boy was good at his “job” because he survived through all of the 1930s on that
same soapbox. And he always looked presentable, 1930s presentable any way. My grandfather said he remembered this one
time this heckler, this big blob of a guy who looked like he would swat golden
boy away with one sweep if it came to that, was really being merciless toward
golden boy calling him a communist, a red, Stalin’s boy, un-American , a dupe,
a nigger-lover (exact words if you can believe that), a kike-lover (ditto on
the believe), and that he should watch out when he and his kind fall into
Hitler’s hands.
Golden Boy
parried those wordy blows, parried with ease, making the goon madder and
madder, and more venomous too. Well this guy finally blew his top and start
talking about how golden boy was nothing but an ape-like mick, goddam Catholic
blarney boy. Golden boy stopped, said nothing for what seemed like an eternity,
and then in a very low voice at first, sensing who was in his audience, began
an impassioned defense of the old country, the old sod, the boyos of Easter 1916 and every other Irish
diaspora-worthy thing he could say. The crowd turned from a passive mass
watching a debate, having a good Saturday’s entertainment, to an angry menacing
mob ready to avenge eight hundred years, or some hundred years of hurts,
especially couple of hefty lads from Southie (South Boston then the center of
the Irish diaspora in Boston) who on another occasion had baited golden boy themselves.
The long and short of it was that this crowd, this mob, turned their faces
toward the goon and started marching on him, angry, getting angrier and as
their pace stepped up (egged on by golden boy’s cadence) they made him run, run
for life. And leading the pack was my grandfather.
I loved
that story and would ask him to repeat it whenever there was a quiet moment of
his choosing. Then one day back in the early 1960s, one day when I hadn’t seen
him for a while since I had grown into a teenager by then with teenager angst
and alienation concerns and no time for an old man’s memories he told me that
on his last trip to Boston he had found out, found out second hand, that golden
boy was still holding forth at Park Street on Saturdays and that I should, despite
my busy schedule, make time to go hear one of the last of the great Irish
orators. And I did so a few weeks later. When I leaped up the stairs to the
exit at Park Street I heard a voice, kind of scratchy, kind of lilting too
though, speaking of the great struggles for civil rights down in the South and
that one and all must support the freedom riders and the sit-in students. Since
I was interested in that whole civil rights struggle down South as I was
getting my own political feet wet, I figured that that voice would have a mob
around him. When I exited the station I was surprised to see a man about fifty
feet away, an old tall man with white hair, unkempt hair that might have at one
time been blond, in an old bedraggled suit that had seen better days, wearing
shoes that desperately needed shining standing a little wobbly on a soapbox
with a small cigar box in front for donations. Golden boy. And as he held
forth, held forth kind of righteously not one person stopped to hear his
message…
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