KLog

View Original

The idea of porter at the Opry

April is National Poetry Month and we're revisiting works by Kentucky poets.  
This tribute was written upon the passing of the Wagon Master, his own self, Mr. Porter Wagoner.

A poem by Walleye Stevens

He sang, bound by gardenias of sequins.
The thin man from West Plains barely filled his suit.
Like a marionette, his gestures made larger
By half-empty sleeves; he and Nudie greeted us
With gaudy cries of cheatin’ and drinkin’.
He was ours and we were his. At once, all, 
Veritable Hillbillies of the Ozarks.

The suit was not a costume.  Nor was the hair.
As loud as the embroidered curlicues,
Tall as his cotton-candy pompadour,
He was a sign in bold-face archetype
Readable from the last row of the Ryman;
Visible on a Crosley radio.
He knew he was somethin’ to brag about.

For he was the maker of the song he sang.
The ever-sparkling, ever-tragic heart 
That triumphed with each stomp of his blue boot.
For now, dim the stars -- and the house lights, too.
The Opry upstairs says “Company’s Comin’”
Tonight, Nudie Suits will scour the sky
Lookin’ for some other mind to satisfy.