"The story that goes with it."

Click for good music ... ... if I could still play.

Meanwhile, learn what it's like to be:
Down And Out

(by another gallant knight, Clarence Leonard Hay, who -gaily bedight- went to the tropics)

So, you've come to the tropics? Heard all you had to do was to sit in the shade of a coconut glade while the dollars roll in to you. They told you that at the bureau? Did you get the statistics all straight? Well, hear what it did to another kid, before you decide your fate. You don't go down with a hard short fall - you just sort of shuffle along and loosen your load of the moral code, till you can't tell the right from the wrong. I started out to be honest, with everything on the square, but a man can't fool with the golden rule in a crowd that won't play fair. 'Twas a case of riding a dirty race or of being an also-ran. My only hope was to steal and dope the horse of another man. I pulled a deal in Guayaquil in an Inca silver mine, but before they found it was salted ground I was safe in Argentine. I made short weight on the River Plate, when running a freighter there; and I cracked a crib on a rich estate without even turning a hair. But the deal that will everlastingly bar my soul when it knocks at Heaven's doors, was peddling booze to the Santa Cruz, and Winchester forty-fours. Made unafraid by my kindly aid, the drunk-crazed brutes came down and left in a shivering, blazing mass, a flourishing border town. I was next in charge of a smuggler's barge off the coast of Yucatan, but she sank to hell off Cozumel one night in a hurricane. I got to shore on a broken oar, in the filthy shrieking dark; with the other two of the good ship's crew converted into shark. From a limestone cliff I flagged a skiff with a pair of salt-soaked jeans, and I worked my way, for I couldn't pay, on a fruiter to New Orleans. It's kind of a habit, the tropics, it gets you worse than rum; you'll get away and swear you'll stay, but it calls, and back you come. Six years went by before I was back on the job, running a war in Salvador, with a black-faced, barefooted mob. I was General Santiago Hicks at the head of a grand revolt, and my only friend from start to end was a punishing Army Colt. I might have been a president, a prosperous man of means, but a gunboat came and blocked my game with a hundred and ten marines. So I awoke from my dream, dead broke - drifted from bad to worse; sank as low as a man can go who walks with an empty purse. But stars, they say, appear by day when you're down in a deep, black pit; my lucky star found me that way, when I was about to quit. On a fiery hot, flea-ridden cot, I was down with the yellow jack, alone in the bush and all but dead, when she found me and nursed me back. She came like the miracle man of old and opened my poor blind eyes, and upon me shown a bright new dawn as I turned my face to the skies. There was pride and grace in her brown young face, for hers was the blood of kings; in her eyes there shone the glory of empires gone, and the secret of world-old things. We were spliced in a Yankee meeting house on the land of your Uncle Sam, and I drew my pay from the U.S.A., for I worked on the Gatun Dam. Then the devil sent his right-hand man (I might have expected he would) and he took her life with a long thin knife, because she was straight and good. Within me died hope, honor, pride - all but a primitive will to hunt him down on his blood-red trail - find him and kill, and kill. Through logwood swamps and chicle camps, I hunted him many a moon, and I found my man in a long pit-pen, beside a blue lagoon. The chase was o'er at the farthest shore - it ended my two year quest; and I left him there with a vacant stare and a John Crow on his chest. You see these punctures on my arm? Do you want to know what they mean? These marks were left by fingers deft of my trained nurse, "Miss Morphine". Of course you'll say that's worse than drink; it's possible, too, you're right; at least it drives away the things that come and peer in the night. There is a homestead down in an old Maine town, with lilacs around the gate, and the Northerners whisper, "It might have been," but the truth has come too late. They say they'll give me one month to live - a month or a year is the same; I haven't the heart to play my part at the end of a losing game. For whenever you play, whatever the way, for stakes that are large or small, the claws of the tropics will gather your pile and the dealer gets it all.

For a standing still version of the poem, click here.


                            Prologue ......... The story that goes with it.

                                           Indian Page ............. Schoolboy on the run.

                                        3rd Division Page ........ How I tied the war.

                 Imjin Buddy Bunker ........ "Can Do" pages.

                       Bridge Page .................. By the rude bridge.

                        Courthouse Page ........ I tried to go straight.

                        Cabana Page ........ We're gonna hafta build.

                    Bestbird Pages ............ This crowd ain't fair.

                    Flag Page .................... It ain't necessarily so.

     Discoball Page ............. Kids I didn't deserve.

And, click here to read:
A Premature Epilogue

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