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Scott Ruescher’s book of poems, Waiting for the Light to Change, has just been published by Prolific Press. It is available at https://prolificpress.com/bookstore/.
To a Cajun Farmer of Alligators on the Run from his Wife
To a Cajun farmer of alligators on the run from his wife
Dancing to the rhythms of “Let Me Be Your Teddy Bear”
With a teenaged runaway in a room you rent by the hour,
To a madman from Muscatine in a sequined black jumpsuit
And a far too obvious toupee, all sunglasses and love handles,
Interrupting the lead act and storming the stage
At a meticulously inauthentic blues bar on Beale Street
To shake, rattle, and roll for us and rock around the clock
With hankies in his underpants to make his balls look big,
Or to an Episcopal priest from an all-male church in San Francisco
Exploring his Dionysian side on a solo vacation,
Dressed as a fabulous Elvis in blue suede high heels
On drag night at a gay bar in that restored Victorian
Historic district on the northern edge of Midtown—
And to anyone who’s ever attempted that swivel of the pelvis
Or visited the Graceland mansion on the edge of Memphis
As I did one Monday in the 90s, only to find it closed—
Elvis is the same icon of sexual individualism
As he was to some insurance man from Wichita, Kansas,
In Memphis for a convention that week, boogying
His heart out on the dance floor of the Holiday Inn bar
Like he had at a sock-hop in the 50s with his girlfriend
To Elvis’s first recordings, “Mystery Train,” “Jailhouse Rock,”
“Blue Suede Shoes,” “That’s All Right,” only this time contorting
His face into that sexy pout, his posture into that pretzel twist,
Going wild at last, at age 67, with rhythm and abandon
With a woman from Tulsa, Duluth, or Dayton
Who’d taken the whole week off from her job at the post office
For fear of missing out on the daylong visit to Graceland
That she so much enjoyed the day before yesterday,
Between the shower, the dinner, the ceremony, the reception,
And the all-night after-party at the wedding of the son
Of a friend she graduated from high school with, in 1957.
— Scott Ruescher
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