There is something romantic and uniquely American about Election Day. This day allows one to make such a seemingly inconsequential yet all empowering act. Below you will find a poem that, I believe, firmly explains this day's importance and appeal.
J.D. MCCLATCHY:
Election Day
The older couples had voted just after dawn,
And by noon the exit polls are underway.
Some talking head opines in San Jose.
A poster leans mute and silent on the lawn.
"As the wind blows, so the flag will wave,"
Says a cynic who is nevertheless waiting in line.
The woman in front of him has been assigned
The nearest booth where she plans, again, to save
The Republic from itself - the drama played out
In this miniature theater, with its curtain and cast.
Today will be a performance of the past,
Its fortunes and flaws, its certainty and doubt.
The pencil has no eraser. She makes her choice,
Determined but still uncertain how it will end,
As the Founders were as well who thought to lend
So much importance to each small impassioned voice.
But will the cynics vote now cancel hers?
She stays behind to watch him enter the booth.
(In our democracy, we think the truth
Is what everyone, regardless, secretly prefers.)
She won't know anything but threats and trends
Until, again in the dark, but midnights now,
She can sense what hope the numbers will allow,
And what you get when you smear or overspend.
She will sit and stare at charts on CNN.
(But aren't we redeemed by what they cannot show?
The struggle in each restless heart to know
The terms on which the nations fate depends.)
She will think how, at last, millions have spoken as one,
That freedom requires an open mind and hand,
And the strength to be forgiven and understand,
And that tomorrow morning it has all just begun.
J.D. McClatchy teaches at Yale. His sixth collection of poems, titled "Mercury Dressing," will be published in February.
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/july-dec08/jdmcclatchy_11-07.html
Welcome to the home blog of Mr. McFarland's social studies classes. Here you will find class discussion posts, assignments, useful links, and more.
Saturday, November 8, 2008
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