I think even your Grandpa Ben was embarrassed
By how Grandma Gert clung to him when he showed up
At a bar-mitzvah. We’d heard he’d taken another name,
Married someone else, run another business,
But it was like he never left . . .
Once, I think I was eleven, she took me to meet him for lunch.
We stood outside the diner for nearly an hour.
When we saw him, she grabbed my arm,
I asked, “who’s he with,” but your grandma didn’t hear
And just pushed past everyone until we stood
In the path of the other two. “Who’re they, Ben?”
I heard the woman ask. “C’mon, keep walking,”
He said, and they were gone, so we
Went home. We never ate lunch.
Lunch
by Benjamin T. Greenberg on 09. May, 2004 in poem
View Comments to “Lunch”
Leave a Reply
Ben Greenberg's Weblog
Folks I've got them hungry blues
And nothin' in this to lose
People tellin' me to choose
Between dyin' and lyin' and
keep on cryin'
Tired of them hungry blues
Listen ain't you heard the news
There's another thing to choose
A brand new world
clean and fine
Where nobody's hungry
And there's no color line
A thing like that's worth
anybody dyin'
I ain't got a thing to lose
But them doggone hungry blues
Subscriptions (RSS)
Photos on flickr
- St. Petersburg Police Bind Hands And Feet Of 5-Year-Old African-American Girl 23. Apr, 2005
- Lynching In Tuskegee —blog this now!! 20. Aug, 2004
- More On The Prisoners From Orleans Parish Prison 29. Sep, 2005
- Edgar Ray Killen Says God Will Get You (If You Helped Put Him Away) 01. Mar, 2010
- Earlier This Week at Occupy Boston 14. Oct, 2011
- Cold Case Reporting 24. Sep, 2011
- HONK! Photo Exhibit in Davis Square 05. Sep, 2011
- Why Won’t the Justice Department Reopen the Malcolm X Murder Case? 24. Jul, 2011
-
Rickeyevans6: I was locked up wit edger ray killen and I have wr...
-
Ben: Thank you for your comment, Robert. So pleased to...
-
Robert Otkins: I am Robert son of Phalba it is very refreshing to...
-
robert otkins: Thank you so very much for your article on my gran...
alabama
andrew goodman
barack obama
ben chaney
boston
california
chicago
clarion ledger
concordia parish
concordia sentinel
danielle mcguire
department of justice
dexter grimsley
doj
edgar ray killen
fbi
federal bureau of investigation
florida
gotv
grand jury
haley barbour
hillary clinton
jackson
james chaney
jerry mitchell
john mccain
kkk
ku klux klan
louisiana
martin luther king jr
michael schwerner
mississippi
murder
naacp
pete seeger
philadelphia
primaries
recy taylor
sarah palin
somerville
stanley nelson
twitter
video
woodville
youtube
Twiitter
Link Love
- Protest Infatuation and the 4th Wave of Democratization (3): OWNI.eu, News, Augmented
- El Oso: Protest Infatuation and the 4th Wave of Democratization
- BEAUTIFUL, ALSO, ARE THE SOULS OF MY BLACK SISTERS: ALABAMA HOUSE APPROVES APOLOGY FOR MRS. RECY TAYLOR
- This Black Sista's Page: Justice At Last For Recy Taylor?
- Jack & Jill Politics: At 91, Recy Taylor Still Waits for Justice
Categories
Archives
Disclaimer
The views expressed on this site are mine, and those of my guest authors, and do not represent my employer.
Recent Bookmarks
- minor jive • Awesome cover of “On the Radio” by my friend...
- Path — Ben Greenberg
- Path — Ben Greenberg
- TED's Taboo: What's Too Controversial for the Hipster Confab? - Business - GOOD
- Keyboard Maestro 5.2.1: Work Faster with Macros for Mac OS X
- minor jive • Cicadas & Gulls - Beautiful acoustic @feistmusic &...









Quotidian delights and the genealogical momment… what’s so magical about this poem–and I must say, Benjamin, if this one and “Frankie Gets Lucky” are any indications, you have emerged into a distinct, deeply meaningful style these days and I might suggest gathering them into a fascicle and sending them to the Poetry Society of America’s chapbook competition or anywhere really–what’s so magical about this poem is the way in which it stays within the experiential moment. It begins with an uncertain address–”I think…embarrassed”–and this uncertainty about the relative is the crux of the poem and it’s ability to capture an unpredictable family moment and at the same time illuminate a character. The reader–me–doesn’t know who is being addressed but this is not some elision. The poem’s vernacular staging allows us to listen in and over hear an everday address broken up, indeed, complicated, by a subtly theatrical recollection; the incident so upsets the rememberer and the “you” that, in fact, they do not engage the quotidian act referenced in the title: that is, lunch. What a wonderful poem!
I’d rather approach the poem on a purely human emotional level. I feel so badly for your mother & you who (if I read the poem right) had to witness your father’s infidelity in a particulary traumatic & humiliating way.
I too endured a humiliating childhood filled with abuse that was emotional & physical at my parents hands. But there was no infidelity involved in their marriage. I just wish they had never gotten married to begin with (though I would never have been born & never met my father, who could be quite a nice human being–once we grew up & he stopped taking his tantrums out on us).
Oops, I misread it! It was you & your grandmother & he was already married to the “other woman.” But that doesn’t lessen the sense of humiliation yr. grandma must’ve felt. My heart goes out to her.
BTW, I met Mel Swig (some kind of relation to yr. grandma I presume) a few times in the 1990s because I did fundraising for Brandeis U. & he was a ‘nominal’ board member. “Nominal” might be unfair, but by the time I knew him he pretty much wanted off the board.
I am fortunate not to have suffered abuse from either of my parents. I wish my father could have said the same about his parents. I just started digging around for something he wrote in the 1980s, a prayer of sorts, about his feeling painfully bound to follow the religous commandment to “honor thy mother and father.” When his piece turns up, I’ll post it . . .