Quote:

“A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.”--Martin Luther King

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

First Trouble















Photo by RP Thomas


Young Lizzie

Before she stood with Tex that night in
San Antonio, Lizzie had never sang in front
of a crowd of rodeo riders and hangers-on.
Growing up in Port Arthur she’d heard all
about Joplin of course, named her horse
“Janis,” and vowed to get out of town as
soon as she could.  When she was ten her  
dad died and her mom cried until a bull rider
named Griffin came along.  Lizzie never
liked him and told him to “fug” off.  The first
song she sang was “Me and Bobby McGee,”
which she purloined from her Aunt Tillie’s
Pearl before it melted in the Texas sun.  

By 15 she was ready to run and no longer  
a virgin; Tillie took her to Austin to “settle
her down.”  Calling Lizzie wild and destined
for trouble, Tillie found a job In a cheap motel;
soon thereafter Lizzie’s life and everything else
she knew fell all to hell.  She dated a cowboy
punk who had a wife and baby at home, drank
until she was drunk as a skunk and began to
roam Austin’s streets on her own.  Just as
Tillie told her it would, her day did come;
Lizzie got a gun and held up a liquor store; in
Texas that’s a stretch, so Lizzie did her four.


TS

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