What Really Happened Nov 22  1963The day that Kennedy was killed

    Was the day before the Stuyvesant-Clinton football game.

    There was a rally in the auditorium

    And our coach who was from Texas or Oklahoma said slowly, carefully,

    “There isn’t a horse that can’t be bucked.”

    Meanwhile half the school was marching along

            Fifteenth Street to Union Square and then up to

            Forty Second Street and Fifth Avenue and some got up to

            Fifty Ninth, and they were parading,

            Yelling, “De Witt eats shit” until they were stopped by policemen.

                  I didn’t go.  I stayed in school.

                  That day I almost got into a fight

                  With a fellow twice my size on the stairway

                  And he laughed at me.  A friend of mine broke it up.

    In English the head of the Physics Department walked

    Into the room.  He said, “I think you are old enough

    To understand this.  The President was shot today in Texas.”

            I stand up.  I do not understand.  I say, “What”

            And I think, the President was shocked today in Texas.

            He leaves the room.  I am sorry.

    I leave early. The Clinton game is called off,

            And the series has since been discontinued.

    My French teacher is waiting for me.  Smiling shuffling his legs

            Touching his teeth with his tongue looking at me

            He says, “There is a rumor that Kennedy was shot.

            Do you know anything about that?”

    A week later I go to my cousin’s bar mitzvah

            Out in Long Island, and I bring a catalog with me

            From the Bernard Baruch School of City College.

                        I want to be a stockbroker.

    It is windy outside and we walk a mile or more

            To get to the bar mitzvah

    And as I walk I talk to my mother

    And I think carefully of what I am to say

    And I narrow my eyes.

    It is a cold and windy three days after Thanksgiving

    And I point my thumb to my stomach and chest

    And I brush my scarf against my face

    And I say, “I too want to become President.”

— David Lehman, March 1967

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Author: The Best American Poetry

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