The Last Election
Aug 22nd, 2008 by John
The Last Election
by
John Haines
Suppose there are no returns,
and the candidates, one
by one, drop off in the polls,
as the voters turn away,
each to his inner persuasion.
The frontrunners, the dark horses,
begin to look elsewhere,
and even the President admits
he has nothing new to say;
it is best to be silent now.
No more conventions, no donors,
no more hats in the ring;
no ghost-written speeches,
no promises we always knew
were never meant to be kept.
And something like the truth,
or what we knew by that name–
that for which no corporate
sponsor was ever offered–
takes hold in the public mind.
Each subdued and thoughtful
citizen closes his door, turns
off the news. He opens a book,
speaks quietly to his children,
begins to live once more.
–from Many Mountains Moving
* * * * * *
from The Best American Poetry: 1999 edited by Robert Bly and David Lehman (Scribner Paperback Poetry)
John Haines was born in 1924 and wrote this poem in response to the 1992 election.
Popularity: 6% [?]
That would be wonderful!
that is where i am going.
Fred,
I wonder why this poem still strikes us?
Nancy,
I don’t think you’ll go alone.
John,
Very powerful poem. I really like it.
Wes,
When I came across it, I felt it needed to be shared.
John