Doc says if I ever go down again
I may never get back up
Bones so brittle and blood so thin
Heart sometimes don't try hard enough
I'd been a soldier and later a K-9 cop
Never made the mistake of being too heroic
Worked hard until my body finally said stop
Now I take pride in being called a jolly old stoic
Expected to merely limp on out of life
Retired to a little place 30 miles from Seattle
Somewhere I thought free of urban strife
Turned out to be self-delusional prattle
Little town's name is Snohomish
Anglicization of a Native American word
Translates into whatever you wish
Consensus on its meaning never occurred
Been here now for a little over 10 years
Outlived two consecutive bemused doctors
My new physician shares her predecessors' fears
That she'll be my death certificate author
But I tell'em all I'm too mean to die
Most smile because that's not my reputation
Seeing me and my wheeled walker passing by
Always generates a grin and salutation
My walker's tricked out like a patrol car
Neighborhood kids trail me like a posse
I let'm play with the fake siren and light bar
Moms get to have another undisturbed coffee
Rollo, my last K-9 retired along with me
He passed on about 6 years ago
Nothing about being alone makes a man feel free
Sometimes I dream of Rollo
Lot of trouble recently in big cities
Riots, looting, burning during "peaceful" protests
Seattle isn't immune to these atrocities
Mayor declares right to protest is constitutionally blessed
Seattle police chief has a home near me
I remember her from when she was a cadet
Even as a rook she was a paragon of probity
Her making chief was always a good bet
Seattle city fathers took a gubernatorial knee
To the protesters chose to surrender
Promised to defund and defang cops like we used to be
Lessen impediments to those intent on plunder
Police chief politely but strongly demurred
That didn't endear her to the firebreathing mob
Who wanted their right to arson left undeterred
Thought vandalizing her home might do the job
200 of the "activists" showed up out here
Two doors down surrounding the Chief's home
Maybe liquored up on ecstacy and beer
Demanding that the Chief come out to atone
Chief happened to be in Seattle just then
So their immediate hate impulse was unrequited
I "walkered" down and unwisely butted in
Told'm out here they aren't invited
Mob's existing power-lust abruptly trebled
Didn't like being dissed by an aging cripple
Both me and my walker they disassembled
Left us a bleeding, human/mechanical ensemble
Glad I'm on permanent non-breathing vacation
A civil rights prosecution warrant awaited
I was to be charged with police impersonation
Because of the way my walker was decorated
Mortician may have to chisel off the grin
From my soulless body in the mortuary fridge
Because I'm back with Rollo and other K-9 friends
There really is a Rainbow Bridge
YOU ARE READING
A Desirable Alternative To Cultural Insanity
Poetry"O tempora, O mores!" I wish Cicero was still around to give us his input on this age and its customs. This is based upon a real-life incident that took place in Snohomish, Washinton a few days ago. The character who misses his dog Rollo is based...