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Witchcraft

July 11th, 2006 greypilgrim No comments

[Following is a parody of a typical Ann Coulter column, based on what I perceive her response would be to a very real news story taken from the Washington Post. The character I created to represent Ms. Coulter does not really exist, nor does the town newspaper for which she writes].

Anne Crupper is an op-ed contributor for the Pinchburg Vigilante, a daily newspaper for Pinchburg, Missouri. Although Ms. Crupper has spent time in Washington as a speech writer for Senator Rick Santorum, she has never abandoned her provincial values. Her columns on local and national issues, from a brash Conservative perspective, have gained her a devoted following and led to the syndication of her column on Conservative websites such as TownHall.com. Ms. Crupper’s first book, Not Just Godless: how the Democratic Party has embraced Satanism, will be published by Regnery in November 2006.

Democrat Says: There’s No Nicer Witch Than You

Any number of labels can justly be applied to the Democratic Party and its hate-filled, mind-numbed liberal constituency. A Democrat is a traitor, a liar, a coward, a Socialist, a terrorist sympathizer, a baby killer, and a sexual predator; yet however evil liberal Democrats have become, no major member of the Democratic Party could be called a Devil Worshiper. Until now.

As reported in the Washington Post, on July 10 Virginia Governor Tim Kaine pardoned the state’s only person ever to be convicted of witchcraft. In 1706, Grace Sherwood was accused of witchcraft. To determine the truth of the charge ahainst her, the local authorities gave her a trial by water, an accepted practice for determining whether a person is a witch or not. Her thumbs were tied to her toes and she was thrown into a river, where she floated to the top, a clear sign that she was indeed a witch.

Governor Kaine, apparently, thinks he knows better than our forefathers how to deal with witches: he pardons them. In a typical display of astounding liberal arrogance, Kaine said, “With 300 years of hindsight, we all certainly can agree that trial by water is an injustice.” In other words, those Colonials were a bunch of intolerant, backwoods bigots; if they found Sherwood to be a witch, they must have been motivated by misogyny and ignorance.

Liberals disgust me with how easily they can dismiss the wisdom of our ancestors.

Why not give the witch a Congressional Gold Medal while we’re at it? I am sure Ted Kennedy would gladly endorse such an award, even when he is sober. Heck, why not pay restitution to the witch’s family. The entire Democratic caucus will stand behind any resolution to award taxpayer dollars to someone who has done nothing to earn it.

What most appalls, in reading this story, is the flagrant way in which Governor Kaine stepped over the bodies of martyred Christians in order to pluck this one obscure witch from history. In the days before Thomas Jefferson (blessed be his name) enshrined religious freedom in our law, undoubtedly there were Christians tortured for their beliefs at the hands of ruthless, British inquisitors. Yet Kaine can’t seem to find one single eighteenth century Christian to pardon who was tortured or executed for his beliefs.

The trial by water test the witch Elizabeth Sherwood was subjected to does not even constitute torture, by most modern standards. The United States Army Field Manual prescribes a similar kind of “torture,” known as waterboarding, as appropriate for the interrogation of terrorists. The practice of dunking, or waterboarding, or testing by water, has been around since the middle ages and is an honorable technique of coaxing a recalcitrant terrorist, witch, or heretic to provide useful information to the authorities.

Moreover, almost totally elided from the news articles concerning the “pardoning” of the confessed witch, Elizabeth Sherwood, is the fact that she suffered no real damage, either physical or material. She survived and was released! She was not burned at the stake in 1706, as she no doubt should have been (apparently, there were bleeding heart liberals in the eighteenth century, as well).

Afterwards, she lived out a quiet life on her property until she died in 1740. Yet to hear the liberal Kaine discourse on the subject, Sherwood suffered the most grievous of injustices, when in fact she received not a fraction of the punishment she deserved.

Kaine’s deference for a Satan worshipper is merely one more symptom of how the Democratic party has completely abandoned the values of ordinary, Bible-believing Americans. Liberals have embraced the Prince of Darkness as their “god,” and they are worshipping him daily, through acts both small and great.

Governor Kaine’s pardon of Elizabeth Sherwood, the Witch of Pungo, may seem insignificant, but it must not be viewed as a single act of misguided kindness. When a Democrat pardons a witch, it must be viewed as a treasonous, heretical act of aggression against America and our Lord Jesus Christ.

Dollar Days

May 2nd, 2006 greypilgrim 8 comments

[Ed. Note: Following is a piece of "fake news" I am going to submit to The Wittenburg Door. Any critical advice you can provide would be appreciated.]

Dollar Days in Washington

In a stunning move to reenergize his flagging Presidency, President Bush on Tuesday literally gambled his last Dollar on an unorthodox Presidential appointment.

In a Rose Garden press conference, President Bush nominated the Reverand Creflo Dollar to replace departing Secretary of the Treasury John Snow.

Clearly pleased with himself, the President stood beside Dollar, who was dressed in an impeccable, dark blue Fioravanti suit, and said, “I’ve looked into this man’s heart and decided that he is the most qualified person to replace Treasury Secretary Snow. Besides, anyone with the last name “Dollar” has got to be good with money.”

In his prepared remarks in the Rose Garden, President Bush said he felt that the Reverend Dollar was a good philosophical fit for his administration because like Dollar, so much of the President’s own decision-making is based on “good intentions, wishful thinking, and an optimistic faith that good things will inevitably happen to good people.”

The President and newly appointed Treasury Secretary took no questions from the press, but the Reverend Secretary Dollar did make a brief statement.

Mr. Dollar said, “Together, my congregants and I built a twenty million dollar church with tithes from the faithful from all over the country. Faith built our church, faith built our country, and I’d like to reintroduce faith into our economics.”

Dollar is the founder of World Changers Church International, a multi-million dollar corporation selling promises of prosperity to those who contribute at least ten percent of their income to Creflo Dollar Ministries. Those who don’t tithe ten percent are promised a body-mangling car wreck as God’s judgment upon them.

Reverend Dollar said that his first act as Treasury Secretary was going to be to establish a tithing system nearly identical to the system he perfected as part of his ministry. Explicitly denying that this was a new tax, he called it “a mandatory investment in God’s beneficence.”

Americans will tithe to the Federal Government, and God will repay them many times over. In an apparent nod to Presiden’t Bush’s dream of an ownership society, Dollar explained that rather than the Government maintaining its role as a social services provider, through tithing and faith in God, Americans will soon be wealthy enough to pay for health care and other essentials themselves.

Dollar said, “Those that tithe at least ten percent of their income to the God-fearing, Republican-led Government, on top of what they pay in taxes to the Godless Democrats who unfairly confiscate their income, will receive ten times their tithing in gifts from the Holy Spirit.”

“Some Christians believe that being poor is holy and good. This is far from the truth,” Dollar stated. God wants Americans to be prosperous, he said.

Dollar hopes to have set up his tithing system within a few weeks, though sources familiar with the glacial pace of government initiatives scoffed at his projection.

Dollar said that as soon as the Treasury website was reconstructed according to his mandate, Americans would be able to set up an autodraft of their bank accounts for the mandatory ten percent “investment.”

Just as with his ministry, Dollar said that Americans will be classified as tithers according to the amount they give. Those that only give the mandatory ten percent will be classified as mere “Participants” and will have no access to any Treasury services, such as soon-to-be-phased-out unemployment assistance, Social Security, or Medicare. “Participants” may also expect that God will not provide them enough to eat on a daily basis, until they increase their tithing. A death in the family is also not out of the question.

Those that tithe at least twenty percent of their income will be called “The Righteous Retailers of Freedom,” and in addition to God’s bounty, they will receive in the mail every week an audiotape with a personal message from Reverend Secretary Dollar.

Those that tithe thirty percent are known as the “Gracious Guarantors of Democracy,” and they will receive their audio message on a technologically advanced Compact Disc that promises unsurpassed sound quality.

Those that tithe fifty percent or more are known as the “Presidential Honor Guard,” and they will receive every week a spiritually charged DVD of Creflo Dollar explaining his Prosperity Gospel to a crowd of faithful, American worshippers at his suburban Atlanta church. Among other special features on the DVD are the Confessions of Taffi Dollar, the Reverend’s wife, recorded especially for this DVD.

As the Reverend Secretary Dollar and President Bush exited the press conference, a reporter for The Christian Science Monitor shouted a question, which Dollar did not ignore, defying the tradition of such events.

The reporter shouted, “Can you explain more specifically how Americans will be repaid for their investments?”

Reverend Secretary Dollar turned and said, “What did Jesus do when the poor widow put her mite into the temple treasury box?”

The reporter looked stumped, perhaps by the word “mite.”

“See, you should read your Bible,” Dollar replied. “Because of the poor widow’s faith, as soon as her coin hit the bottom of the collection box, Jesus multiplied her offering a thousand times. So if you have Faith in my Treasury and in God, so might your offerings be multiplied.”

The poor widow was unavailable for comment.

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Seasons Meetings

January 10th, 2006 greypilgrim 3 comments

[Following is a piece of fiction I wrote on Sunday. This is not a side-splittingly funny piece; it's more along the lines of "funny if it weren't true." I was inspired to write this after hearing a sermon in which the pastor mentioned that many of the Megachurches who had been so stridently fighting against the "war" on Christmas in December nonetheless did not hold services Christmas Day because Christmas fell on Sunday!]

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Ask your daughter about new Vaygar™

December 26th, 2005 greypilgrim 5 comments

Mainly because I have no idea how I’d ever work this into a piece of fiction, I am printing here a parody of a commercial I thought of this morning, while lying awake before dawn.

Ask Your Daughter About New Vaygar™

[Advertisement begins with a college-age girl sitting on her bed, listening to her iPod. Her Dad enters nervously, hesitates, then sits down on the bed beside her; she pops her earbuds out of her ears to hear what he has to say.]

Dad: Honey, I’m going to be leaving on a cruise to the Bahamas with my new “friend” Valerie. I was wondering…well…do you have any more of those little blue pills?

Daughter: Dad, you don’t have to be embarrassed.

[Daughter reaches beneath her pillow and pulls out a foil pack of blue tablets. Dad takes them gratefully, blushing.]

Daughter: Remember, Dad, just one little blue tab a day and you’ll feel twenty years old again.

Dad: [Laughing] They’re even the color of my new sports car.

[A man dressed in the white coat of a doctor walks on camera.]

Doctor: If you’re a man going through a mid-life crisis, you should ask your daughter or son about new non-prescription Vaygar™. It completely breaks down the inhibitions that prevent you from achieving the happiness you deserve at your age. And just one little blue tab a day helps silence the prickings of conscience that may keep you from acting on your impulses. You won’t even remember your ex-wife’s name, let alone that you left her for a younger woman.

Announcer: [speed reading] Side effects will include overwhelming lust accompanied by heart palpitations and shortness of breath at sight of young women, an erection that lasts longer than 24 hours, excessive use of credit cards on unnecessary purchases, and sudden marriages.

Doctor: So ask your daughter about new non-prescription Vaygar™. After all, you’ve worked hard all your life. Why should young people have all the fun?

Announcer: New Vaygar™. Also available in new Vaygar B.C.™, for children worried about their Dad replacing them with step-siblings. Vaygar B.C.™: birth control for your Dad.

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Onanism explained

November 17th, 2005 greypilgrim No comments

I’ve written a new piece of satirical fiction, which I have published under the title The Lost Book of Onan. If you take the time to read it, I hope you derive some enjoyment from it.

About ten years ago, I wrote a piece called the Apocryphal Book of Onan, which is much inferior to my updated version. Indeed, it’s sole recommendation is that it is under a thousand words; ‘many words won’t fill a bushel,’ as the Aphorist said.

I recall that in the summer of 1994 or 1995, I read the piece to my friends Todd and Dawn, as well as Dawn’s sister Linda and her cousin Shelley. Linda, I think, was shocked and offended. Shelley didn’t seem to mind it, nor did Dawn. Todd, who was much more serious-minded at the time, thought it blasphemous and juvenile.

The charge of blasphemy may in fact be true, but if so, I blaspheme out of ignorance rather than a Voltairean contempt for religion. On the subject of my juvenile sense of humor, I own up to that as well. The updated version of the story is, if anything, more chock full of sexual puns and double entendres than the version I wrote when I was closer to my true juvenile stage. For comparison’s sake, I will also publish the 1994 version of this story, and you can judge for yourself whether I have matured with age or only grown more perverse. Following are links to both pieces. Enjoy.

The Lost Book of Onan

The Lost Book of Onan [circa 1994]

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The Lost Book of Onan

November 17th, 2005 greypilgrim 1 comment

“The Lost Book of Onan”

With a Preface by Father Hanlon O’Toole

Editor of Cacare Bis in Die

Official Organ of the Order of the Holy Prepuce

Of Onan we know little, but much hermeneutical ink has been spent upon what little we do know. In the Book of Genesis, we learn that Onan was a son of Judah, and that when his brother Er died leaving no offspring, under Jewish law Onan was required to conceive a child with his widowed sister-in-law. Onan, knowing that the child would not be his child, practiced coitus interruptus each time he lay with his brother’s wife. For that, God killed him. From four verses in the 38th chapter of Genesis, much of the Christian church’s teachings on human sexuality are derived.

With the recent discovery of a lost piece of the Apocrypha, the Book of Onan, our understanding of God’s Will for the member of His body, in regards to human sexuality, is greatly increased. It has been my great honor to have been chosen by the Vatican to edit this small, yet remarkable book, the Book of Onan. It is my contention, as well as the contention of those other Theologians who have read it, that in this book we have a genuine work of Apocrypha. Accordingly, we have recommended to Pope Benedict that he immediately give consideration to the inclusion of this book in all future editions of the Holy Word.

Perhaps some explanation is in order detailing how such a treasure as a previously unknown text of Holy Scripture came into the hands of the Brothers of the Holy Prepuce.
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Operating Plan 5

September 29th, 2005 Matthew 7 comments

“…need to gather information for the Operating Plan, Operating Plan 5 actually, and if…”

My eyes are becoming thick as glazed donuts. The guy in front of me looks like a pirate. He has a patchy beard; his wife should buy him a beard trimmer for father’s day. Maybe he’s not married. He has a little twist of a pony tail high up on the back of his head. Pony Tail Guy, like Comic Book Shop Guy. Kinda fat, too. Patchy the Pirate. All he needs is an eye patch. Arrrgh.

“…the Directors and I are developing a vision, or a strategy, what have you. Discussions are ongoing to determine…”

Must stay awake. Will Pony Tail Guy fall asleep? This keeps me awake, watching him. He fell asleep in our last meeting. He actually started snoring. Last two meetings, now that I think about it. This room is darker than our usual meeting room, but he doesn’t fall asleep.

Eye patch. I knew a girl with an eye patch. That was third grade, and her name was Donna. I had a crush on her. So I sit here. Imagine if I were a third-grader sitting in on this meeting. Render ridiculous. Riddikulus, Neville said.

Donna. A little girl in my third grade class. It’s a cliché, but her brother shot her eye out with a BB gun. For awhile, she had a big wad of cotton taped over the empty eye socket, then a black eye patch. She wore thick glasses, too, that made her one good eye a glowing, misty orb. She wore her straight, brown hair in a pageboy. I remember her in plaid, which wasn’t a cool style in the early eighties. She wore plaid skirts and multi-colored turtleneck sweaters. She had big teeth, but all third-graders have big teeth. When their permanent teeth come in, children’s teeth are full-size but their faces are still childish and round.

Donna sat beside me in class, and we’d work together when there was group work. I liked sharing my reading book with her. She would shyly put notes in my book for me to find later. Other kids teased us for liking each other.

Wonder what Donna is doing today? Hope she’s happy. What year was it? I always have trouble figuring years, or any numbers really. 1982, maybe. Anyway, it’s long gone.

“…now, we need to discuss whether after each project is submitted we need to have a close out meeting, what…what did the people from Google call it? A post mortem, though I don’t like that word, like it even less than the word fungible, but I think we need to have a close out meeting…”

Why am I always attracted to wounded chicks? Because I myself am wounded. Mutually assured destruction, let’s call it.

After Donna, there was blonde-haired, blue-eyed Colleen Wilt. Overweight, that one. On the playground, there were large tractor tires half-buried in the ground on which we climbed during recess. We would crawl inside the biggest tire and talk for the entire half hour. We liked the way our voices echoed against the rubbery walls of the tire. I remember a gang of boys standing outside the tire and making fun of us. Colleen took me through the rest of that year. Then, next year…I don’t know what happened. Kid’s are so changeable. From one year to the next, who knows what the difference is, but something changes and suddenly two kids don’t know what to say to each other anymore. Maybe their interests change. Friends go their seperate ways after awhile. Gone.

“…now what we should cover in a post mortem is what went right with the project, what went wrong, what worked, and what didn’t…”

Third grade me is shy, quiet. I still cry, if teased. I don’t know my multiplication tables. I remember we had to be able to stand in front of the class and say our multiplication tables through twelve. I could do through six really well, but after that I would hang. Too much to remember, maybe. I can’t count in my head; I have to use my fingers. So that hinders me. My teacher becomes angry if I even look at my fingers, so I mentally visualize my fingers and count imaginary digits. Sometimes when I have to count, I lay my hand on my leg and, ever so gently, I press with each finger as I count. I still do this today, over twenty years later.

The morning I had to say my multiplication tables was a rainy day. I rode the school bus to school, and with my finger, I wrote sums on the steamy bus window as I tried to get over the hump of the sevens. Rain pattered against the glass and cars splashed by in the opposite lane.

At school, when it was my turn, I stood in front of the class and said my times tables until I got to seven. 7 times 2 is 14. 7 times 3 is…21 (I could get that one by remembering the equation in reverse: 3 x 7 is 21; I could do my threes). 7 times 4 is…28. 7 times 5 is 35 (easy, fives are easy). 7 times 6 is…is…(I am gently pushing with my fingers against my leg, trying to count)…41, no, 42 (Why can’t I ever remember that? I like 42!)…7 times 8 is…

I get no farther. I begin to fidget from one foot to the other; I break out into a sweat. My mind is blank now. I can’t count on my imaginary fingers, or on my real fingers.

Mrs. Smith clears her throat. She is a thin, black-haired woman, someone I would describe today as having a French woman’s face and a French woman’s severity. “You can’t count, Matt,” she says. At first I think she is insulting me; I lose count on my mental fingers.

“Sit down,” Mrs. Smith says coldly, finally.

I hear sniggers from a boy named Chris as I go back to my seat beside Donna.

“Don’t feel bad,” Donna whispers. “Seven is a hard number.” And I feel a little better, though my eyes are still prickly with tears.

Donna says her times tables all the way to twelve. Bright girl. Beautiful girl.

“…perhaps before the post mortem, um, close out meeting…now I’ve got that word post mortem in my head…I will send around a form I’ll make up for you to voice your concerns in writing. That will serve as an informal agenda…”

I read somewhere that school, with its bells, assigned seats, and discipline is meant to be preparation for the drudgery of adult work. Where did I read it? I don’t know. Karl Marx; Pink Floyd. Who knows. This is like a scene from Office Space: we are having an hour-long meeting to plan for future meetings.

Third grade me sits, fingers pressing his leg, trying to work out the product. I can’t quite figure it. Quiet, quiet me; how did you get here? I remember a story we read in third grade about a boy who moved from the country to the city, and how he was homesick for the country. In the book, he wore sneakers. That was the first time I’d heard that word. I’d always heard them called tennis shoes. I remember thinking I’d like to live in a city; I’d like to walk on sidewalks and take the bus. Now I do all those things.

It isn’t even half as glamorous as I expected.

“So then, are there any questions? No? Until next time…”

Ida Green

August 9th, 2005 greypilgrim 3 comments

For ease of reading, this story is also available for download as a Microsoft Word document. All rights reserved. Click on the title below to download.

Ida Green

Ida Green had lived at the Washington fish market a long time. She could not remember living anywhere else. She lived in a tank with many other frogs in a stall owned by a man named Bill Bailey.

Bill liked to sing a song he made up to attract people to his stall. He sang:

Bush is in the White House, he’s doin’ his best.
Reagan’s in the graveyard, he’s takin� his rest.
He’s gone. Gone long time.

Early every morning a chef named Robert from a fancy restaurant called La Colline would ride his bicycle down Capitol Hill to Bill�s stall on the wharf. Robert picked out seafood and frogs to take back to his restaurant. He packed them all in a cooler strapped to the back of his bicycle, and then he rode back to the restaurant.

He had not yet chosen Ida Green, and since no other frog had ever come back from La Colline, none of the frogs in the tank were any the wiser as to what happened when Bill took them out of the tank and gave them to Robert.

A wise, old frog named Harry Croaker told the frogs that Robert took them to a marshy paradise where frogs lived forever and dined every day on the choicest insects. Ida Green was not so sure about that, but she didn�t say so.
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Rented Space, Chapters 14-15

June 8th, 2005 greypilgrim 3 comments

14.

When Crabbe arrived at the Starbucks at noon on Monday, Clinton Curry was already waiting for him. He sat in a deep, cushiony chair near the window. Jazz was again playing through the in-house speaker system, this time Miles Davis, �Bird of Paradise.� Like all the furniture in Starbucks, the chair looked like it might have come from IKEA. A paper Starbucks coffee cup sat on the table in front of him. A pretty girl sat in another soft chair next to Curry. That left one chair around the table for Crabbe.

As Crabbe approached, Curry looked up from the newspaper he was reading (The Washington Post); he smiled and stood, extending his hand for Crabbe to shake. The girl looked up from her magazine, Cosmopolitan, and smiled sweetly. She rose only a little out of her chair to greet the poet, nodding and smiling but not offering her hand. The girl looked ten years younger than the thirty-ish Curry; she could have been a freshman in college. Her chestnut hair was pulled back in a pony tail. She was wearing a pink tank top, gray running shorts, and flip flops. Her bra strap was showing from under the thin strap of the tank top.

�Hello,� Crabbe said, looking at both of them in turn.

�Hello there,� Curry said, sitting down and motioning for Crabbe to take a seat. �We weren�t sure about finding the place, so we arrived early.�

Curry spoke with an English accent that gave away no trace of his Northern England lineage; any rural accent had been educated out of him at Oxford. He came from a little town on the North Atlantic called Hull but had long ago left it and England behind. He was a scrawny fellow with curly, dark hair who, although he was probably thirty, dressed the part of the perennial college student. He wore a tee-shirt that looked natty enough to have come from Goodwill and jeans that looked just as old. The tee-shirt was green with the number 42 on it in white; it reminded Crabbe of something a kid would have worn in the seventies. A leather satchel sat on the floor next to Curry�s chair, and Crabbe imagined this young man slouching across campus with that satchel lazily slung across his chest.

�This is my graduate assistant, Monica Harwell,� Curry said.

Monica looked up from her magazine and smiled.

�Oh, aren�t you a little young to have your own graduate assistant?� Crabbe said to Curry, smiling and sitting down in the one unoccupied armchair.

�Well, the English Department recognizes the importance of my work, so they made a special consideration in my case,� Curry responded.

�I�m flattered that the English Department considers my life so important,� Crabbe said, shifting more comfortably into the chair. �Is the workload that heavy?�

Curry said, �I needed someone to help me with the research. She is reading and taking notes on that batch of letters between you and Caitlin Crane.�

Crabbe blushed. The thought of Monica reading the only letters he had ever written that could justly be called love letters made Crabbe a bit uncomfortable. On the other hand, she did not even seem to be paying attention to the conversation between Crabbe and Curry. She read her magazine intently, one brown leg crossed comfortably over the other knee, pink flip flop dangling from one bouncing foot. Crabbe suddenly noticed that the title of almost every article on the cover of the Cosmo magazine was sex-related.

�Ten Moves That Will Make Him Pass Out From Pleasure.�

�Do you make men melt? Take our sex survey.�

�Your Hands-On Guide to Pleasuring Him Manually�

�His Nine Pleasure Triggers�

suppose he�s fucking her must be fucking her and suppose she�s on the pill or maybe uses a diaphragm

Crabbe suddenly had an arousing vision of Monica sucking Curry�s cock, ponytail bobbing.

Crabbe cleared his throat.

�Ah, Cate,� Crabbe said, coming back to the moment. �Have you talked to her?�

�I interviewed her last month and she gave me additional materials,� Curry said.

�Oh really?� Crabbe said, trying to hide his curiosity.

�She let me photocopy some pages from her diaries from the time period you and she were�dating.�

�Yes,� Crabbe said, hoping Curry would continue.

He did not, at least not in the vein down which Crabbe wished to go.

�But that does raise the first question I have for you.�

Crabbe expected the graduate assistant, Monica, to suddenly come alive and pull out a pencil and notepad and begin taking notes, but she merely turned the page in her magazine and sat there as inscrutable as ever, flip flop flouncing annoyingly on one foot.

�Why didn�t you and Cate stay together?� Curry asked. �I mean, I have my theories, but you were together so long. She feels she wasted the best years of her life waiting for you.�

�Well, you can probably glean the answer to that from my letters and diaries,� Crabbe said, shifting in his chair. �And I�m sure your guess is correct; you�ve been remarkably astute so far. I mean, if you get it wrong I can correct it when you show me a draft.�

�I�d kind of like to hear it from you, though,� Curry said. �Just to make sure I�m on the right track. I don�t want to follow the wrong path, here.�

Crabbe paused and sighed. Then said, �Well, I�ve thought about it over the years. At the time, I was reluctant to marry because I thought family life would dry up the well spring of my talent.�

�That�s your stated reason,� Curry said. �Do you think your reluctance had anything to do with your mother? Fear of women, maybe?�

Crabbe felt stung. �No need to make this into an analysis session,� he said, trying to smile.

�Well, I�m trying to make some deductions here,� Curry said, �and I�ve got to make sure I�m on the right track.�

�Yes, well, I�d rather you didn�t pursue that too deeply. People already read too much autobiography into my poems.�

Curry shrugged, �Well, from what I�ve read, it seemed a plausible explanation. Tell me about your mother. What are your memories of her? You mention her so little in your letters and diaries, yet smothering mother figures are everywhere in your poetry.�

Crabbe was growing angry now, though he tried to suppress it. �Oh, look. Do you really need me to sit here under the microscope?�

The couple times he and Curry had met previously, Curry had not been so pressing on personal matters. Of course Curry had just been starting off. Now he seemed to know just what topics Crabbe considered off-limits, and he was determined to breach only those areas.

�Look, Mr. Crabbe, you hired me to write this��

�You came to me,� Crabbe reminded him, feeling hot and wishing the air conditioning were turned up. �I am helping you out by giving you the greatest opportunity you are ever likely to have in your entire life.�

Curry looked unimpressed. Monica had finally looked up from her magazine.

probably thinks opportunities like this are just handed out to youths these days typical fucking arrogant young academic

�Maybe so, � Curry said equably, �But we both mutually profit from your honesty. Neither your reputation, nor mine, is going to be enhanced by an authorized biography that is viewed by critics and scholars as expurgated. Now tell me about your mother, and tell me about Caitlin as well, if you wish.�

tell me about your mother

Music comes to the fore of the soundtrack as the camera pulls back and the focus goes soft. The song playing on the phonograph is Peggy Lee�s �Waiting for the train to come in.� The sound is scratchy and unclean. Mother listened to music much of the day while cooking, cleaning, doing laundry; she listened mostly to jazz but also some popular music. The love of jazz was one of her bequests to her son, Eugene.

Mother sat at the kitchen table, elbows on table. Between the forefinger and index finger of her right hand she holds a Chesterfield cigarette (the kind Ronald Reagan sells on television). She leans her forehead on the hand holding the Chesterfield, toxic blue-gray smoke clouding her face. She looks depressed, a common enough appearance in this household. Ash falls from the cigarette end to the tablecloth and she only glances at it, does not even brush it off the table. She is tired, tired.

From the doorway, seven-year old Eugene says, �I�m running away.�

He has threatened this twice already this week.

�Did you hear me? I said I�m��

Mother leaps up so quickly, Eugene starts back; he expects a slap. Instead, she says, �Fine. You want to go? Let me help you pack.�

She puts the cigarette between her lips and pushes Eugene out of the way as she stalks past him. Eugene follows her upstairs to his bedroom, feeling sick inside.

In his bedroom, she jerks so hard on the drawer of the dresser that she pulls it off its runner. She rips it out of the dresser, wood cracking, and throws it upside down on the bed. The drawer and spilled clothes bounce briefly on Eugene�s Davy Crockett bed sheets.

Mother kneels, pulling a small boy�s suitcase from under the bed. The cigarette stub still on her lip, she squints against the acrid smoke as she lifts the valise onto the bed. She flips the drawer over and opens the case and begins stuffing clothes into it.

�I�am so sick�and tired of you,� Mother says, shoving haphazard dungarees and polo shirts into the case, followed by underwear unfolded, socks indiscriminate of color.

�No, Mom!� Eugene says. �Mom, no!�

�Oh yes, I am�fed up!�

�Mom!� Eugene is begging now, crying. �I�m sorry!�

�Shut up!�

She shoves down so hard on the lid of the suitcase, the bed shakes. Latching it, she shoves the suitcase into his arms, and he lets it fall to the floor.

�OK, you want me to carry that for you?� she picks up the suitcase and starts for the bedroom door.

�Mom, what will I eat? I can�t go,� Eugene says through tears.

�Shoulda thought of that before you made your stupid threat,� Mother says. �Now get out!�

She plants a side-of-the-foot kick on his rump that almost sends him falling through the doorway.

�Go!� she says, as he starts moving.

Passing the bathroom, she flips her cigarette butt neatly through the doorway and into the sink, a gesture elegant and thoughtless on her part. Grace and violence, these are what stand out in Eugene�s memories of his mother.

Snuffling through tears and snot, the boy descends the stairs. His mother opens the door and places the suitcase on the stoop.

�Here you go. Don�t let the door hit you!� Mother says.

Eugene steps outside.

�Mom!�

Mother slams the door so hard as he is moving to step back inside, it almost hits him in the nose.

For a few moments afterwards, Eugene rings the door futilely. No one answers.

�Mom, I�m sorry! I take it back!�

No answer. The boy sits down on the stoop beside the suitcase. He waits a long time. Eventually, he stops crying, only to start again when he thinks of his mother�s words, �I am so sick and tired of you!�

Eventually, Father comes home from University.

�What the hell are you doing out here? Get the hell in the house before the neighbors see you.�

His father unlocks the front door and lets Eugene in. Inside, Mother is in the kitchen cooking. She seems almost gay.

�What the hell�s going on around here?� Father asks.

�Oh, he said he wanted to run away again, so I helped him along with that. Guess he changed his mind,� Mother says, looking over her shoulder from the pot of boiling potatoes she is tending to at the stove.

�Again? Jesus. Why do you do this to your Mother? Want me to whip him?�

�Oh no,” Mother said. “I think he�s learned his lesson. Haven�t you, Eugene?�

�Yes,� Eugene says.

�Good, now go upstairs and clean your hands and face. Dinner is almost ready.�

�Jesus, what a day I had,� Father says, as Eugene turns to go upstairs.

In the bathroom, Eugene closes the door. Locks it. He sits on the toilet seat and weeps out of frustration, hatred, and confused love for his mother. Then he washes his hands. He says the ABCs quietly as he washes, a habit his mother instilled in him early. When he gets to �won�t you come and sing with me,� he rinses and dries. Then he washes his face. Rinses and dries again.

There is an emptiness growing inside of him. He knows it even at this young age. Where there ought to be happiness, there is only darkness. Where there ought to be pure love, there is nothing. Eugene Crabbe, seven-years old, goes down to dinner.

�Did you grow up thinking your mother didn�t love you?� Curry asks.

Music fades into the background; camera focus resolves, edges sharpen.

�I didn�t know�what to think,� Crabbe says, breathing out. �I got both ends of the spectrum from her. One moment she was tenderness and love, the next�well.�

�Why did you want to run away?� Curry asks.

�I don�t remember,� Crabbe says.

�Tell us a good memory,� Curry asks.

�I remember lying in bed with her,� Crabbe says. �She read to me. Dad only read the newspaper and his Biology journals. Mom read poetry and literature. She had a college education, but in those days college for a woman was a means to finding a man who was going places. Ever read Sylvia Plath?�

�That�s significant,� Curry said, ignoring Crabbe�s question. It was unclear to what he was referring.

Making his own assumptions about what Curry had meant by �that�s significant,� Crabbe said, �Yes, but you know it�s the bad memories that have the most power. The bad ones stick with us longer than the good ones.�

�I�m not so sure that�s true, Mr. Crabbe,� Monica said suddenly. Crabbe had not been aware she had begun paying attention. Now he saw that she had lain down her magazine and was listening.

�Perhaps its merely your peculiar psyche that obsesses over bad memories,� Monica said. �memory is tricky anyway. You can�t remember why you threatened to run away, for example, maybe because you�re embarrassed by whatever petty grudge you were holding against her that resulted in your threat. Maybe you�d threatened once too often and this was just the last straw. I�m not excusing her, but you should try to see the situation from her perspective.�

�A life is not a book to be deconstructed,� Crabbe responded.

�Isn�t it? I mean, isn�t that what we are doing in writing a biography, deconstructing a life?�

�No, it�s the poetry that matters, not the life,� Crabbe said. �The life is merely a means of getting at the poetry.�

�Sometimes I�m not so sure about that,� Monica said. �Maybe it�s the other way around, poetry is ancillary to the life. Maybe it is poetry that is ephemeral, life eternal.�

�You�re an English major?� Crabbe retorted coldly.

�Yes,� she said placidly.

�I�d expect professors to teach some kind of crap like that today.�

�That�s just my opinion, not a proffesor�s,� she said. �They still venerate literature in University English Departments. Don�t worry.�

�No, poetry is eternal and must be viewed separate from the life of the author,� Crabbe said with authority. �Otherwise, writing is a waste, a kind of�masturbatory act.�

�Masturbation is a waste only if you don�t enjoy it,� Monica said, laughing a little.

Crabbe blushed, suddenly hating this girl and finding himself powerfully attracted to her at the same time. She didn�t know it, but she would find herself in his own masturbatory fantasies later that evening.

bitch why don�t you stick to something you�re good at like spreading your legs you cunt

Curry had been sitting silent during this exchange, making a few notes on typing paper he had taken out and placed on the table as Crabbe spoke. Now he spoke up.

�Let�s not get too theoretical here,� Curry said finally. �I�m ready to hear about Cate now.�

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Rented Space, Chapters 8-13

May 10th, 2005 greypilgrim 12 comments

8.

The distance from the Madison Building entrance to Pete�s diner turned out to be no more than a few feet across C street from the Madison building. The diner was so small it was almost invisible, situated as it was between a small French-style caf� and a dentist�s office. A few patrons were sitting outside at tables on the sidewalk. The afternoon was quite pleasant.

�Would you like to sit outside?� Boylston asked.

�No,� Crabbe said. �I can�t bear too much sun, plus the thought of insects getting into my food.�

�O.K.�

As they stepped inside, Crabbe thought he could guess why Boylston had suggested they eat outside. The diner was crowded and so small it reminded Crabbe of some of the claustrophobic European eateries he had frequented in Paris and Brussels and other cities. If you sat at the bar and turned around, you were inevitably going to kick someone sitting at a table behind you. The thought of having to eat in such proximity to other people repulsed Crabbe, but he had no choice but to enter.

Unfortunately, it was to the bar that Boylston headed. After squeezing past the people sitting at the tables, Boylston hopped nimbly up onto a stool covered with a dirty-looking piece of cloth like a hairnet. The whole place, from the greasy wood paneling, to the mismatched silverware and coffee cups, to the hairnet-covered bar stools, smacked of decrepitude, and Crabbe didn�t like it. What�s more, the diner was being operated by four Asian women—Vietnamese or Chinese or Korean, Crabbe couldn�t tell the difference. Maybe they were Thai, for all he knew. Yet a Chinese calandar hung on the wall by the cash register, and paper Chinese lanterns were suspended from the fly-specked ceiling tiles. Crabbe was deeply unsure about what kind of restaurant Boylston had brought him to. It was too much a mixture of styles and cultures for Crabbe�s taste.

He followed Boylston clumsily, excusing himself as he bumped up against people at tables, finally slipping past them all and sidling up onto a stool beside the Librarian.

�Do you know what you want yet?� Boylston asked, after a bit.

Crabbe said, �I can�t find a menu.�

Boylston pointed up on the wall above the grill. A letter board displayed a general menu, mostly consisting of American food, as Boylston had said: grilled cheese, BLT, cheeseburger and fries, lasagna. Hanging above the grill and the counter, pieces of regular, white copier paper had the Specials printed on them. The Specials were a cheeseburger combo, a barbecue pork combo, and kung pao chicken.

One of the Asian women, a chubby, middle-aged woman whom Crabbe took to be the proprietor for some wholly illogical reason (she was the oldest of the four women), came over and in passing asked what they would have to drink. She was very busy, but after taking their drink order, she took time to smile at Boylston, who smiled back.

�We haven�t seen you in long time,� she said.

�I�ve been around,� Boylston said. �I�m so busy, I eat in my office more often than not these days.�

She hurried on her way, and Boylston said to Crabbe, �I know you said you don�t care for Asian food, but you really ought to try the kung pao chicken. Have a Vietnamese spring roll as a side. Delicious. The peanut sauce they use here is better than in just about any other restaurant in Washington.�

Crabbe said, �Maybe next time. I�m going to stick with something safe today.�

When the woman returned a short time later with water for Crabbe and hot Lipton tea for Boylston, she asked to take their order. Crabbe ordered the cheeseburger combo with fries. Boylston ordered the curry chicken kabobs with a spring roll.

Ordering out of the way, Boylston said, �Now we can talk. How are you adapting to life and work here in the District? Everything going well for you? Is there anything I can do for you?�

�No, not really,� Crabbe said, thinking, you can move me to an alcove where I can look at Shakespeare or Plato�s ass, rather than the ass of Mr. Commerce. �I�ve found a place to live which is adequate for now.�

�Have you thought about how you are going to make the Laureateship your own?� Boylston asked.

�Well, I have a few ideas,� Crabbe lied.

�Give me a preview,� Boylston said.

�I was thinking, um, of a new poetry contest I could judge…� Crabbe did not continue, hoping this would be enough.

�Have you researched what other Poet Laureates have done in the past?� Boylston asked.

�Oh yes,� Crabbe lied.

�I mention it because in the past, Poet Laureates have traditionally done something to encourage young people to write. Think of the post as an Instructional position. Do you like teaching young people?�

�Um, yes,� Crabbe lied, �But I�d like to take the position in a new direction.�

�Poetry contests are nothing new,� Boylston said bluntly, sipping his tea. �Now maybe if you incorporated a contest into some kind of outreach to elementary school students…�

The thought of reaching out to any Elementary School student made Crabbe shiver.

Boylston continued, �Still, I don�t necessarily like the idea of a contest. Competitions like those�well, there are always so many good poets excluded in order to proclaim one or two winners. Don�t you think? What great poet ever won a poetry contest anyway, you know?�

Crabbe could name at least one: himself. He had won many competitions since he himself was in Middle School.

�Perhaps I need to put some more thought into it,� Crabbe said.

When the food was brought, conversation fell into a bit of a lull as the two men ate. Crabbe noted sullenly to himself that his burger appeared to be a pre-made frozen patty, probably purchased in bulk instead of handmade fresh. The fries were very greasy, too. Boylston, of course, had to proclaim the superiority of his meal. Crabbe always found something to dislike in everyone he met, and so far what he most disliked about Boylston was his apparent enjoyment of exotic food.

makes him feel o so refined I�ll bet, Crabbe thought. probably eating someone�s pet right now, he added, glancing at Boylston�s chicken, which looked peculiarly dark, even for chicken. Crabbe recalled a picture he had seen on the internet of a Chinese meat market stall with skinned, dead rats hanging from a clothesline.

When the meal neared the end, Crabbe finally asked the question he was most curious about. He wasn�t sure he wanted to hear the answer, but he asked anyway.�Why did you pick me as Poet Laureate?�

It was a question that had been bothering him for a long time. He had gone over in his mind all the many possible answers: everyone else had turned it down; it was simply his turn chronologically. The answer Boylston gave was one Crabbe had never considered.

�I really like your poetry,� Boylston said.

�You do?� Crabbe said, suddenly liking this man a little better.

�Oh yes. I�ve always admired your pessimism and cynicism. Maybe that sounds a little odd though,� Boylston said, smiling.

�You don�t exactly strike me as a pessimistic or cynical man,� Crabbe said.

�Yes, well, I sometimes think Americans give short shrift to the darker side of the American vision. Everyone loves to read Edgar Allen Allan Poe, but even today he would never be nominated for the poet laureateship. Same with Ezra Pound or T. S Eliot. So I saw this as an opportunity to step outside of convention. And to nominate a poet I really liked, of course.�

Crabbe was at a loss for words. For some reason, �thank you� did not occur to him. Boylston did not seem to be waiting for a thank you, however.

To break the silence, Boylston asked, �Do you know who the First Lady wanted me to choose?�

�Who?� Crabbe said, his mouth dry.

�Ted Kooser.�

�Ted Kooser?�

�Un-hunh. She thought we needed a poet from the mid-west. Kooser would have been the first one. He�s from the brighter tradition of American poetry, you know, poetry of walks with dogs down country roads, poetry of dishwater and porch swings. Frost, not Pound.�

�Frost had his dark side,� Crabbe added, almost to himself.

�Yes, but that is not how he is perceived,� Boylston said.
And continuing, �Mrs. Bush did not care for the fact that I wanted to choose you.�

Crabbe felt stung. He had voted for President Bush, after all. Twice.

�She feels you are too nihilistic. She also used the words ‘cramped’ and ‘misanthropic’ to describe your poetry. She wanted someone expansive, not to mention agrarian rather than urban. You are an urban poet, after all. And she said you were too European in your sensibilities, too French is what she said specifically.�

Crabbe took a drink of water and licked his lips.

�She said all that?�

�Yes.�

Crabbe was stunned.

�I always thought…I mean�I�m a Republican. I thought I had a…vision that appealed to other Conservatives. Rush Limbaugh mentioned me on his show.�

Now it was Boylston�s opportunity to be stunned.

�You�re atheistic, if not nihilistic. You are mocking of religion, tradition, marriage, and the family generally. What is there about your vision that would appeal to Conservatives? And do you really think Limbaugh ever read one of your poems?�

Crabbe did not answer immediately, then said in answer to both questions,

�I don�t know.�

�I think you�ve read too much Ayn Rand. Conservatives aren�t like that anymore, if they ever were,� Boylston said, finishing his tea and picking up the tab. Crabbe made no attempt to stop him from paying the entire bill.

Outside on the sidewalk, Boylston said, �I don�t think you�re French in your sensibilities. I think Mrs. Bush misidentified the character of your angst. I think you�re a Russian at heart, which is what appeals to me about your poetry.�

�I don�t know if that�s a good thing or not,� Crabbe said. �I�d rather be an American poet.�

Boylston laughed, �I think we�re all fools for supposing there is any such thing. Walk with me a bit. I�ll show you a perfect, secluded spot for reflection. I go there myself after lunch, even when I eat in my office. You need to make sure you get out of your office at least two or three days a week, Eugene.�

The place Boylston took Crabbe was the Summer House, a hexagonal, red-brick structure open to the sky in the middle and set against the sloping western hillside of the Capitol grounds. A fountain stood in the center of it from which, in the nineteenth century, tourists had drank. Now there were signs around it warning people not to drink the water. Boylston and Crabbe sat on the rather crusty benches that circled the structure. They sat there quietly for awhile, listening to the burbling fountain and enjoying the cool breeze that seemed to linger in this spot.

�Isn�t this delightful? Most people never suspect that this place is here.�

�Yes, very nice,� Crabbe said. �I might come here on my own sometimes.�

�You should,� Boylston said. �Bring a book. Did you ever read Anna Karenina, by the way?�

�I read the Russians in college,� Crabbe replied, �But I never read that novel. I read two short Tolstoy novels, The Cossacks and The Death of Ivan Ilyich.�

�You really must read Anna Karenina sometime. Maybe we can discuss it together as you read it. It�s my favorite novel. Forget War and Peace. Anna is Tolstoy�s masterpiece. There is more of life in it than just about anything ever written, except Shakespeare.�

Boylston chuckled. �My favorite scene…I�ll never forget reading it the first time. It�s a hunting scene. A couple of Tolstoy�s characters are hunting, and there is a bird dog, of course. Tolstoy actually gives the dog a personality and interprets her thoughts for us. It�s a really amazingly written scene, and I remember thinking, �The man that can put thoughts in the mind of a dog and make them seem like perfect doggy-thoughts…now that man is possibly the greatest writer to ever live.��

Boylston paused. Gazing at the clear, overflowing fountain, he could easily recall the scene to memory as if seeing it upon the surface of the water. He remembered where he was when he read it, too, every circumstance surrounding it. He had been in his college library at a table. He remembered looking up, tears in his eyes, from the beauty of what he had read. Everything around him shone bright with that beauty reaching out across the decades since Tolstoy had written the words. The girl sitting at the next table across from Boylston, how beautiful she had been! The quiet pensiveness of that library, how beautiful it was! The sunlight through the smoky windows, how beautiful! Boylston had never felt more deeply the beauty of life as in that moment.

Even now, so many decades later, Boylston both smiled and misted up a little at the memory of it. Crabbe did not notice.

�Will you read the book, if I send you a copy?� Boylston asked.

�I may already have a copy�� Crabbe started.

�No, let me give you a copy,� Boylston said.

Crabbe shifted uncomfortably on the hard bench.

�Well, OK�should we go back now?�

�Yes, I suppose,� Boylston said, sighing.

Soon,as the two men parted, Crabbe to return to his swank office in Jefferson, the Librarian to return to his official office in Madison, Boylston said, �Let�s meet again soon. Maybe next time we can begin our discussion of Anna.�

Crabbe smiled weakly. �Sure. We�ll see.�

His thoughts were still preoccupied with Mrs. Bush, possibly the toughest critic a poet ever had.

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