From Country 
You can look back at the resume of western swing and remember 
McAuliffe, Leon.  How I love to sing and live amid reminiscences!
 
At our son Jacob’s wedding at Warren Wilson College, I met 
Billy Edd Wheeler.  He wrote “Jackson,” 
 
which Johnny Cash and June Carter recorded:  
Billy Edd tells the story how that song came out of 
 
his seeing “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”  
Wheeler also wrote “The Reverend Mister Black,”
 
“Coward of the Country,” and hundreds 
more, including “Ode to the Little Brown 
 
Shack Out Back,” prompting Nin and me to restore 
our two-holer:  you can’t tell by odor 
 
the quiet moments in a place like that:  my 
brother Paul read his love letters there:  you 
 
can’t tell the depth of the well by the length 
of the handle on the pump either:  Louis Prima! 
 
Keely Smith!  Josh White carried his folk songs 
everywhere:  FDR asked him to perform 
 
at the White House.  Songs of the people!  I 
imagine White singing “Boll Weevil,” “Frankie 
 
and Johnny,”  “Trouble in Mind,” and another 
I learned from him, “Foggy, Foggy Dew,” plus 
 
one more − “He Never Said a Mumbling Word”:  March 
’63 through December ’64, I worked for 
 
A.T. & T. Long Lines, White Plains, New York, travelling
the northeast, buying land for microwave towers 
 
and easements for underground cables and 
I bought a small portable phonograph 
 
to carry from motel to hotel in 
my car, that black blob of a Plymouth Fury, whose 
 
rear fenders swooped up and out like a caution:  I 
played Josh White on that phonograph, my 
 
1960 Austin-Healey Sprite, the last of the 
Bug-eyes, at home:  I enrolled as a special 
 
student in English, University 
of Pittsburgh, January, 1965, to see 
 
if I could get back that old feeling I had 
for words − poems, songs, stories:  I knew 
 
the first night in a room I rented from 
Mrs. Charles Caldwell, Regent Square, Swissvale, that 
 
I would stay in school:  I called my mother 
and she announced she was pulling onions 
 
out of the backyard when she’d drive the 
Sprite for groceries; she said, “Son, your 
 
Daddy says you don’t get in this thing, you 
put it on”:   Mama, I think of you when 
 
I hear Josh White sing, “Were You There 
When They Crucified My Lord”:  remember, O 
 
Bede, when dusk burns and my children’s 
children flutter somewhere in memory 
 
like a bird trying to fly through one window 
and out the other − remember Who knows 
 
what musical jam might field the singer’s 
eyes − Walt, Emily, the Beowulf 
 
poet, Ammons, Roethke, Robert Lowell, Thomas Wolfe, 
O Lost − one life, fat or slim, whittled-down 
 
and left alone like Slim Whitman to sing 
“Indian Love Call,” the song my brother Paul 
 
sang at many weddings when I was starting 
to remember, looking back to understand 
 
How our school principal, Mr. N.G. Woodlief
could say often of Paul − He’s good at 
 
dramatics − Paul, Rube Priest of our gigs:  “You 
just blow me away,” he’d say, raking his hand 
 
through no-hair on his bald head or, to repeat, looking 
at Nin, sizing me up: “Linda, do you ever wake up 
 
grumpy?”  Linda:  “No, I just let him sleep”:  I 
don’t think we sow what we reap or sharpen what 
 
we hoe, do you?  Why, for instance, befuddles me, these 
people have not been selected for the Country 
 
Music Hall of Fame?  I mention George Hamilton IV 
again:  Slim Whitman?  Wynn Stewart!  Hamilton and Whitman 
 
spend a lot of time performing in England.  Why 
not adorn the walls of the hall with these 
 
names:  Jean Shepard (whoopee, inducted 2011), 
Johnny Wright, Jeannie Sealy, Jimmy Capps, 
 
Jimmy Martin, Bashful Brother Oswald, 
Leon Rhodes, Hal Rugg, and more − more. Where’s 
 
the reef which boulders the decisions to include 
the side-pickers and players, pianists like 
 
Hargus “Pig” Robbins, for example − fiddlers 
like Tommy Jackson, Gordon Terry, Johnny Gimble, 
 
Wade Ray, Paul Warren, Kenny Baker, Benny Martin,
Jason Carter, Ramona Jones, Elana James.  Whitman’s 
 
a Floridian, born Otis Dewey Whitman, Jr.  My 
Whitman’s Samplers melt away in the cupboard!  Whitman 
 
sweltered regularly on the Louisiana Hayride, raking up 
bales of hits over the years:  “Secret Love,” “The Bandera Waltz,” 
 
“Love Song of the Waterfall,” lyrics which seem 
made for Yodeler Slim:  he was a good baseball 
 
player, too, like Bill Monroe, Charley Pride, Jim Reeves,
Roy Acuff:  there’s a small book which could 
 
go on a table in a small hotel or bed-and-breakfast:  “Ball 
Players Who Keep Their Pitch While Pulling Up 
 
Their Overalls to See Stars”:  Slim sang one called  
“Rainbows Are Back in Style”:  my style’s to push 
 
the W’s to roar after the Z’s tirement to a 
heedless estate:  I’ll say, “Think I’ll go fishing, it’s 
 
my lazy day”:  The Wilburn Family came along 
that way − Teddy and Doyle − what a family − picking 
 
and singing on street corners, discovered by 
Roy Acuff, arriving on the Opry in ’61.  As 
 
duet-singers go, T & D Wilburn go pretty far 
into any roll call:  Karl and Harty, Bailes Brothers, 
 
Bailey Brothers, Johnson Brothers, Louvins, Jim and 
Jesse, the Malpass Brothers, Ted Jones and his 
 
dad, Ronnie:  some Ted and Doyle Wilburn 
hits:  “Trouble’s Back in Town,”  “Roll Muddy River,” 
 
“Someone Before Me,” “Knoxville Girl,” “Cry, Cry Darling.” 
Wilburns:  Teddy and Doyle, Geraldine, Leslie, and Lester.
 
D.K. Wilgus loved to conjure hillbilly music way back 
there, when lyrics came from the mouths of the 
 
people and legends were real as bats, mockingbirds, and 
mouth-harps:  Wilgus belonged to the American 
 
Folklore Society when folklore was cool:  I 
belong to several societies, myself:  Scottish 
 
Society of North Carolina:  there’s a little 
scotch in me; North Caroliniana Society:  my 
 
friend H.G. Jones pretty much started it and 
keeps it going:  Nin’s mother was a Blue 
 
Stocking:  I’d get a hole in my sock and turn
that heel-hole part up on my foot; I never 
 
belonged to the Holey Sock Society:  my feet 
would get rusty and hard:  I took a weekly bath in 
 
a washtub set in the middle of the pantry floor 
next to Mama’s Home Comfort Range, dancing 
 
with woodsmoke and wonder, while pigs-feet 
steamed in vinegar and the reservoir heated 
 
the little room.  Every stove-eye gleamed red.  When
I was fourteen that world ended except in my 
 
mind.  That was’52.  My father had thirty-five 
dogs and not a one named Blue:  he praised his 
 
“blue-speckled bitches” that ran the gray or red.  As 
a folklorist D. K. Wilgus swelt the land:  he took 
 
hillbilly music seriously:  as the little boy Buster Brown 
might say from his shoe, “Check him out, his name 
 
is in the card catalogue and, of course, on-line, too”:  I’ll 
give the next entry to Hank Williams, since he’s the 
 
crux of my love of poetry and music:  he was 
alive at the start of ’52, the year my life stopped 
 
twice:  left The Plankhouse and Hank died to take 
on “phantom power”:  I never understood that, how 
 
microphones work:  Hank didn’t have to worry about 
such:  fifty-eight years ago, January 1, 1953, I heard 
 
on the radio that “Hank Williams is dead”:  I was 
standing under the walnut tree in the barnyard, as I’ve 
 
said before, a Tree in Memory and 
no longer out there, surrounding my childhood’s 
 
ignorance in figures − low-flying mockingbirds, waves 
of stories wafting, turning up their edges in verses, songs.
Shelby Stephenson's Family Matters: Homage to July, the Slave Girl won the 2008 Bellday Prize for Poetry, Allen Grossman, judge.
Shelby Stephenson's Family Matters: Homage to July, the Slave Girl won the 2008 Bellday Prize for Poetry, Allen Grossman, judge.
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