***The
Roots Is The Toots- The Music That Got Them Through The Great Depression And
World War II…
…and
memories of that girl (or guy you fill it in but I, male, am telling this
story) who got away, the one that you spied in the hallway in school, who kind
of looked, well, interesting, and then you, relying on your boys’ lav Monday
morning before school talkfest about what did or did not happen that previous
weekend found out that she was “spoken for,” unapproachable anyway, and you let
it go at that. Moved on to the next furtive glance and then put that in the
back of your mind. Always wistful though when you saw her down that now forlorn
corridor, wishing that she could be your friend what with what lay ahead as the
war clouds of the world were gathering and you knew you had do something about
it, about stopping the night of the long knives.
Or
still dreaming about that night when another she, a she from work downtown all
beautiful and alluring, who kept making glances your way, especially after you
got your number picked and were getting ready to head out, but who was also
very married, married to a guy, a guy your brother hung out with, whose number
had already been picked and was on his way to Europe, told you in no uncertain
terms that you were her choice to keep the morale of the boys at home up and
took you around the world one night. You then slogging it out in some basic
training hellhole getting, ah, funny feelings thinking about that and about
whether she would still be interested in keeping morale up when you get leave
before shipping off to that same Europe.
Or
try this- you were married to another and yet another she, maybe alluring,
maybe not, but available could be coaxed into doing her “duty” to keep the
morale of the boys waiting for their numbers to be called and meeting in a
crowded bar, a little drunk, a little flirty and not particularly worried about
marital status what with the shortage of men around kind of led you to that
room and showed you like that beautiful and alluring fluff what was what.
Or
maybe story-book Hollywood bill of fare all misty and good that girl next store
who would not give you a tumble but would talk to you for hours, go to the
dances with you, share a soda, drop nickels in the jukebox but who, drunk,
sober, or in between would not do her duty although if you came back alive
them, well, we will see buster.
Or one of a
thousand other reasons for parting, some good, some bad but in misty future
time regret, after accounts were settled and the world, your world anyway, got
back to jukeboxes and furtive glances, regretted for that maybe first love, she
of the hallway school looks, she of the alluring downtown look, she of the
coax-able disposition, she of the frosty no, and why things hadn’t worked out.
Or
maybe a she (remember a male speaking) thinking, thinking too hard for the
times, although war could not banish longing thinking looking out over some Eastern harbor watching
the endless rows of troop ships anchored or setting sail as far as the eye
could see sending that high school corridor flame’s sweetheart to some mangled
beach, that beautiful and alluring office mate’s beau to some busted bridge (she
will catch seven kinds of hell if that GI hubby ever finds out), that available
woman’s last fling to some muddy fox-hole, that Johnnie next door freezing his
ass off in the gunner’s turret over some European sky to fight the good fight against
the night-takers. And Western harbors thinking
universal home fire girl dreams about that guy coming back, coming back in one
piece to take up their dream. And he in some muddied trench, some dank cave,
some frozen beach-head, catching flak over some hostile blood red sky thinking
whether she will be waiting, waiting alone, for him. Thus this song to get one
by on that cold, lonely remembrance night.
No comments:
Post a Comment