Why sing of the lives
of the fortunate few
whose gong-heavy entries
weigh down Who’s Who ?
They’re smug on their summits
and on Footsie Boards,
Permanent Secretaries
or rotund Law Lords;
generals, merchant bankers,
Top Brass at the Beeb,
dons, doctors, bishops. . .
You can spot the breed
by their ability
blind obedience to claim
from drudges and drivers
and shy, single, tame
PAs who sacrifice
lonely weekends
to type bland speeches
for skimpy stipends.
O don’t be deceived
by the Great and the Good –
you’re a rung on their ladder
on their fire, wood,
grain for their harvest,
a wheel on their car,
corpse on their D-Day,
night for their star.
*****
Tom Vaughan writes: I’ve long been fascinated by the phrase ‘the Great and the Good’, having reached the conclusion during long years of government service that the great cannot generally also be good, given the demands of the exercise of power. But I am also intrigued by the loyalty such people can inspire, and the longing for leaders that reflects, despite the advice given by my favourite political commentator, Bob Dylan, in Subterranean Homesick Blues – ‘Don’t follow leaders/Watch the parkin’ meters’.”
‘The Great and the Good’ was first published in Snakeskin 265, October 2019.
Tom Vaughan is not the real name of a poet whose previous publications include a novel and two poetry pamphlets (A Sampler, 2010, and Envoy, 2013, both published by HappenStance). His poems have been published in a range of poetry magazines, including several of the Potcake Chapbooks:
Careers and Other Catastrophes
Familes and Other Fiascoes
Strip Down
Houses and Homes Forever
Travels and Travails.
He currently lives in Brittany.
https://tomvaughan.website
Photo: “MPs and House of Commons officials stand in the House of Lords chamber at the opposite end to the throne, the bar, to listen to the Queen’s Speech” by UK Parliament is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0.