Mercury, Descendant, By Donald Hall
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Mercury, descendant of Henry Ford’s five-
dollar-a-day Model-T factory line,
you educated us and provided means
of exploration,
messenger of adult pleasures that began
at the drive-in movie and continued when
we flew ourselves out of town, winged at the heel,
unnoticed by blue
parents or policeman, to hasten with joy
from public highways onto backroads beside
meadows with your radio playing soft tunes
while we played also.
Helped by ingenious cherished disorder,
we resisted intimidation from old
gods and new teachers, in order to turn old
ourselves, past sedans
and stationwagons back to the two-seater:
Oh, surely your transport will return again
in the procession of motors following
a sable Lincoln.
From “The Museum of Clear Ideas” (Ticknor & Fields: $18.95; 119 pp.). This book includes two series of poems: “Baseball,” written in nine innings, each composed of nine stanzas, each stanza nine lines, and each line nine syllables, and “The Museum of Clear Ideas,” which imitates the first book of the “Odes” of Horace. “Mercury, Descendant” is the 10th poem in that series. 1993 by Donald Hall. Reprinted by permission.
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