Me and Hal and Walter McClure
by Carmen Ruggero
It was one cold winter night when three of us, me and Hal, and Walter McClure went walking under a moonless sky. Fun and girls and spirits had been plenty He was in a mood and deaf to my calling, Three others started raising Cain. But Walt had turned a deaf ear. He raised that stick and briefly looked back It was a-rack-a-tack-tack times many more And I wanted to help him, kept calling him back, I kept gazing at the absent stars And soon I heard nothing but the rack-a-tack-tack, A faint stream of yellow came out of Charley’s window, But the rack-a-tack-tack stopped that night |
The event took place in my hometown of Crawfordsville, Indiana, in January of 1881. The poem is based on Karen Zack’s article “Leave ’em Alone, Charley” and my own research. (Karen Zack is the editor of the feature section “Montgomery Memories” in The Paper of Montgomery County.)
Copyright © 2011 by Carmen Ruggero