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Doin Time
I retired after 40 years guardin at San Quentin.
Mostly 12 hour shifts to send the boys to college,
have a nice house, and nice cars. A lotta good that done.
My wife run off 15 years ago with a fuckin ex-con.
One of my boys died of a meth OD last year. The other
just finished an on-line degree in abnormal psychology,
at Leavenworth. He’ll be spending the rest of his life
behind bars figurin out why he killed those three women.
Most days now l stop on by to visit some guys on D block.
Nobody visits most of ‘em, so I figured I might's well.
I got me enough saved up to get ‘em presents at birthdays
and Christmas, and I can help out a few once they get sprung.
At night, when I dream, I’m still walking them blocks,
doing night checks. After 40 years, including the dreams,
I figure I spent a million hours doin time. But, hell, it's all good.
The only hard time I really done was on the outside.
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(08-06-2015, 05:17 AM)Mark A Becker Wrote: Doing Time
I retired last year after 40 years as a prison guard.
Mostly 12 hour shifts to send the kids to college,
have a nice house, and nice cars. A lotta good that done.
My wife run off 15 years ago with a fuckin ex-con.
One of the boys died of a meth OD last year. The other I think you should change "One of the boys" to "One of my/our boys". I thought you meant one of the prisoners at first read.
just finished an on-line degree in abnormal psychology,
at Leavenworth. He’ll have the rest of his life behind bars
trying to figure out why he killed those three women. I would cut "trying", but that's just personal preference.
Even retired I still come by to visit the guys on the block. Is "even retired" necessary?
Nobody else visits most of ‘em, so I figure I might as well.
I got enough money now to get ‘em presents at birthdays
and Christmas. Two guys that been sprung live at my place. Them living with the narrator is strange to me... I just can't picture it, it sort of seems like the premise of a bad comedy to me. "
At night, when I dream, I’m still walking the blocks,
doing night checks. After 40 years, including the dreams,
I figure I spent a million hours doin time. But, hell, it's all good.
The only hard time I really done was on the outside. I like the ending.
I like the poem, I read it with a butch southern accent. It's sort of like a different take on all those stories of ex-cons struggling to survive outside after a longtime in jail.
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Thank Wj
I've often wondered what it must be like to be a prison guard, working a lot of OT, and odd shifts, at an over-crowded prison. Can't be much different than being locked up...
I appreciated your comments, and implemented some of them. Thanks!
... Mark
Posts: 574
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Joined: May 2013
(08-06-2015, 05:17 AM)Mark A Becker Wrote: Doing Time
I retired after 40 years guardin at San Quentin. -- I think this poem needs physical description.
Mostly 12 hour shifts to send the boys to college,
have a nice house, and nice cars. A lotta good that done. -- I'm not sure about the type of idiom adopted for this poem. "lotta good that done" suggests the speaker has bad grammar. (Not that grammar isn't necessarily a pedantic concern at times.)
My wife run off 15 years ago with a fuckin ex-con. -- Ran off because of the past tense?
One of my boys died of a meth OD last year. The other
just finished an on-line degree in abnormal psychology,
at Leavenworth. He’ll be spending the rest of his life
behind bars figuring out why he killed those three women.
Most days now l stop by to visit the guys on the block.
Nobody visits most of ‘em, so I figure I might as well.
I got enough money now to get ‘em presents at birthdays
and Christmas, and help out a little once they get sprung.
At night, when I dream, I’m still walking the blocks,
doing night checks. After 40 years, including the dreams,
I figure I spent a million hours doin time. But, hell, it's all good.
The only hard time I really done was on the outside. -- I've
Left some comments.
Posts: 695
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Thanks for readin Brownlie-
The grammar strays a bit intentionally, including the very last line where "I've" would be correct, but "I" is right for this speaker.
I have one called "Senses of Direction" that I won't post because it is written with a pure "redneck dialect" that is written and reads almost like a foreign language: it really only works as a spoken poem.
I was going to do a similar treatment with this one, but backed off so that it would at least be readable when posted. This'uns jes gottin a sprinklin o' sum'at kinda lang'age in 'er...
... Mark
Posts: 574
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Joined: May 2013
(08-07-2015, 10:16 PM)Mark A Becker Wrote: Thanks for readin Brownlie-
The grammar strays a bit intentionally, including the very last line where "I've" would be correct, but "I" is right for this speaker.
I have one called "Senses of Direction" that I won't post because it is written with a pure "redneck dialect" that is written and reads almost like a foreign language: it really only works as a spoken poem.
I was going to do a similar treatment with this one, but backed off so that it would at least be readable when posted. This'uns jes gottin a sprinklin o' sum'at kinda lang'age in 'er...
... Mark
I figured the grammar was intentional. As for the dialect, I think it could work if it's accurate. For instance, if I tried writing "redneck dialect" I don't think it would work because I'm not familiar with it.