My Life as a Doggerelist, by CALVIN TRILLIN
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I’m at my desk--not waiting for a muse
But for the Times, the Post, The Daily News.
For deadline poets, muses are much rarer
Than tuning in MacNeil and his friend Lehrer.
It’s they who, perched like ravens on my sill,
Deposit grist that’s needed for my mill.
I’m stuck. I’m blank. The dreaded deadline looms.
I feel my brain is suited for legumes.
I cruise around the dial, I turn the page
To see who might appear upon the stage
As players whom their countrymen salute,
And targets for my bag of rotten fruit.
The news presents a motley little band
That I observe, tomato in my hand:
The congressmen fine-tuned to every fax
That indicates the wishes of their PACs;
The White House staff, the President’s defenders,
All working late, and all in their suspenders;
The tasseled lobbyists, may God forgive us,
Who entertain with steaks washed down with
Chivas;
A President who always makes me feel
The last one was attacked with too much zeal;
A candidate who poses as our savior.
It helps if all are on their worst behavior.
The job of deadline poet is a calling
Dependent always on the most appalling
Behavior that our public figures show--
Supplies of which seem rarely to run low.
Rascality is what we need, plus greed
Overt enough to draw a blush from Tweed.
A fool is fine. A pompous fool’s sublime.
It also helps if they have names that rhyme.
From “Deadline Poet: My Life as a Doggerelist” by Calvin Trillin. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux: $18.) 1994 Reprinted by permission.
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