In the CD player was a disc my oldest son burned for me years ago, a compilation of some of the music I grew up listening to – Howlin’ Wolf, Freddie King, Buddy Guy, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Memphis Slim, Muddy Waters, Mississippi John Hurt and a song I first heard only later, “Dying Crapshooter’s Blues,” a twelve-bar short story performed by Blind Willie McTell (1898-1959) in 1940. The lyrics begin in the third person with Little Jesse the gambler – “Sinful guy, good hearted but had no soul” – dying in bed after being shot by the police. With the fifth verse, Jesse takes over narration:
“Eight
crapshooters to be my pallbearers
Let ’em be
veiled down in black
I want nine
men going to the graveyard, bubba
And eight
men comin’ back”
It’s a tale
of misery narrated with braggadocio:
“Send poker
players to the graveyard
Dig my grave
with the ace of spades
I want
twelve polices in my funeral march
High sheriff
playin’ blackjack, lead the parade”
I have a weakness
for story songs and McTell’s is a good one. The association here is unlikely, I
know, but listening again to “Dying Crapshooter’s Blues” reminded me of a late-twentieth-century
Polish blues – Zbigniew Herbert’s “What Our Dead Do” (trans. John and Bogdana
Carpenter, Ecco Press, 1999). Jan tells the narrator he had a dream in which
his father is in a coffin talking to his son as he walks beside the hearse. Jesse had called for eight pallbearers. Jan’s father, “six men in black livery / walk nicely
at our sides.” The father tells him not to fuss, not to buy flowers or a gravestone,
and reveals the location of hidden money and “cuff links with real pearls.” The
poem concludes:
“this is how
our dead
look after
us
they warn us
through dreams
bring back
lost money
hunt for
jobs
whisper the
numbers of lottery tickets
or when they
can’t do this
knock with
their fingers on the windows
“and out of
gratitude
we imagine
immortality for them
snug as the
burrow of a mouse”
[You may
know Bob Dylan’s “Blind Willie McTell” from 1983. And here’s an interesting juxtaposition of “St. James Infirmary” and “Dying Crapshooter’s Blues.”]
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