Please, Not That Again
How burdensome they seemed, wartime
 oldies that could drive our parents teary:
 “I’ll Be Seeing You,” with its hint
 of being swept off in a global riptide;
 or the shaky follow-up of “I’ll Be Home
 for Christmas,” followed by a shakier
 “Don’t Sit Under the Apple Tree
 (with Anyone Else But Me),” “Comin’
 in on a Wing and a Prayer,” or “Ac-
 Cent-Tchu-Are the Positive.” We suffered
 them on the old cathedral radio, crooned
 by Crosby and Sinatra, had to watch them
 strangled on The Lawrence Welk Show
 or laced with Como’s heavy dose
 of sedative. Dad told us, “Straighten Up
 and Fly Right.” Mom hummed, “Keep
 the Home Fires Burning”—till our music
 cut the cord. Brash and free of corn,
 it hailed rock ‘n’ roll, caught Maybellene
 at the top of the hill, moaned “m’ baby-doll,
 m’ baby-doll, m’ baby-doll.” We played it
 loud and often, but they never understood.
Copyright Credit: William Trowbridge, "Please, Not That Again" from Vanishing Point.  Copyright © 2017 by William Trowbridge.  Reprinted by permission of Red Hen Press.
Source: Vanishing Point (Red Hen Press, 2017)


