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	<updated>2009-11-03T19:37:43Z</updated>
	<title>Comments for A Break for a Bad Man</title>
	
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		<id>tag:ta-nehisicoates.theatlantic.com,2009://8.20463</id>
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		<published>2009-07-01T16:26:15Z</published>
		<updated>2009-07-01T16:31:46Z</updated>
		<title>A Break for a Bad Man</title>
		<summary><![CDATA[[Alyssa Rosenberg]The day job's got me running all over Baltimore today.&nbsp; But I went to a midnight showing "Public Enemies" yesterday, and while I've got a piece on it forthcoming so I won't say much here, it reminded me of...]]></summary>
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			<name>Alyssa Rosenberg</name>
			
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			<![CDATA[[Alyssa Rosenberg]<br /><br /><font style="font-size: 1em;">The day job's got me running all over Baltimore today.&nbsp; But I went to a midnight showing "Public Enemies" yesterday, and while I've got a piece on it forthcoming so I won't say much here, it reminded me of how much I love David Wagoner's poem, <a href="http://www.poets.org/m/dsp_poem.php?prmMID=15382">"The Shooting of John Dillinger Outside the Biograph Theater, July 22, 1934." </a>So if you need a lunch break, and are in a mood for soulful gangsters, read it, here and continued below the jump.&nbsp; <br /><br /></font><span class="mediafirstline"><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Chicago ran a fever of a hundred and one that groggy Sunday.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">A reporter fried an egg on a sidewalk; the air looked shaky.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And a hundred thousand people were in the lake like shirts in 
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;a laundry.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Why was Johnny lonely?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Not because two dozen solid citizens, heat-struck, had keeled
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;over backward.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Not because those lawful souls had fallen out of their sockets
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;and melted.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">But because the sun went down like a lump in a furnace or a
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;bull in the Stockyards.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Where was Johnny headed?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Under the Biograph Theater sign that said, "Our Air is
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Refrigerated."
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Past seventeen FBI men and four policemen who stood in
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;doorways and sweated.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Johnny sat down in a cold seat to watch Clark Gable get
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;electrocuted.
</div></span><br /><span style="font-size: 20px; font-family: Trebuchet MS; color: rgb(51, 51, 51);"><font style="font-size: 0.8em;"><b></b></font><b>
                                                                </b></span> ]]>
			<![CDATA[<span class="mediafirstline"><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Had Johnny been mistreated?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, but Gable told the D.A. he'd rather fry than be shut up
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;forever.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Two women sat by Johnny.&nbsp;&nbsp;One looked sweet, one looked like
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;J. Edgar Hoover.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Polly Hamilton made him feel hot, but Anna Sage made him
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;shiver.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Was Johnny a good lover?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, but he passed out his share of squeezes and pokes like a
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;jittery masher
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">While Agent Purvis sneaked up and down the aisle like an
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;extra usher,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Trying to make sure they wouldn't slip out till the show was
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;over.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Was Johnny a fourflusher?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">No, not if he knew the game.&nbsp;&nbsp;He got it up or got it back.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">But he liked to take snapshots of policemen with his own Kodak,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And once in a while he liked to take them with an automatic.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Why was Johnny frantic?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Because he couldn't take a walk or sit down in a movie
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Without begin afraid he'd run smack into somebody
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Who'd point at his rearranged face and holler, "Johnny!"
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Was Johnny ugly?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, because Dr. Wilhelm Loeser had given him a new profile
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">With a baggy jawline and squint eyes and an erased dimple,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">With kangaroo-tendon cheekbones and a gigolo's mustache
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;that should've been illegal.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Did Johnny love a girl?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, a good-looking, hard-headed Indian named Billie Frechette.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">He wanted to marry her and lie down and try to get over it,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">But she was locked in jail for giving him first-aid and comfort.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Did Johnny feel hurt?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">He felt like breaking a bank or jumping over a railing
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Into some panicky teller's cage to shout, "Reach for the ceiling!"
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Or like kicking some vice president in the bum checks and
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;smiling.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">What was he really doing?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Going up the aisle with the crowd and into the lobby
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">With Polly saying, "Would you do what Clark done?" And
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Johnny saying, "Maybe." 
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And Anna saying, "If he'd been smart, he'd of acted like
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bing Crosby."
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Did Johnny look flashy?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, his white-on-white shirt and tie were luminous.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">His trousers were creased like knives to the tops of his shoes,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And his yellow straw hat came down to his dark glasses.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Was Johnny suspicious?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, and when Agent Purvis signalled with a trembling cigar,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Johnny ducked left and ran out of the theater,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And innocent Polly and squealing Anna were left nowhere. 
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Was Johnny a fast runner?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">No, but he crouched and scurried past a friendly liquor store
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Under the coupled arms of double-daters, under awnings,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;under stars,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">To the curb at the mouth of an alley. He hunched there.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Was Johnny a thinker?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">No, but he was thinking more or less of Billie Frechette
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Who was lost in prison for longer than he could possibly wait,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And then it was suddenly too hard to think around a bullet.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Did anyone shoot straight?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, but Mrs. Etta Natalsky fell out from under her picture hat.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Theresa Paulus sprawled on the sidewalk, clutching her left foot.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And both of them groaned loud and long under the streetlight.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Did Johnny like that?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">No, but he lay down with those strange women, his face
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;in the alley,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">One shoe off, cinders in his mouth, his eyelids heavy.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">When they shouted questions at him, he talked back to nobody.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Did Johnny lie easy?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, holding his gun and holding his breath as a last trick,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">He waited, but when the Agents came close, his breath
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;wouldn't work.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Clark Gable walked his last mile; Johnny ran a half a block.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Did he run out of luck?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, before he was cool, they had him spread out on dished-in
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;marble
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">In the Cook County Morgue, surrounded by babbling people
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">With a crime reporter presiding over the head of the table.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Did Johnny have a soul?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, and it was climbing his slippery wind-pipe like a trapped
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;burglar.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">It was beating the inside of his ribcage, hollering, "Let me
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;out of here!"
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Maybe it got out, and maybe it just stayed there.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Was Johnny a money-maker?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, and thousands paid 25¢ to see him, mostly women,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And one said, "I wouldn't have come, except he's a moral
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;lesson,"
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And another, "I'm disappointed.&nbsp;&nbsp;He feels like a dead man."
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Did Johnny have a brain?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, and it always worked best through the worst of dangers,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Through flat-footed hammerlocks, through guarded doors,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;around corners,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">But it got taken out in the morgue and sold to some doctors.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Could Johnny take orders?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">No, but he stayed in the wicker basket carried by six men
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Through the bulging crowd to the hearse and let himself be
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;locked in,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And he stayed put as it went driving south in a driving rain.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And he didn't get stolen?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">No, not even after his old hard-nosed dad refused to sell
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">The quick-drawing corpse for $10,000 to somebody in a 
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;carnival.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">He figured he'd let Johnny decide how to get to Hell.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Did anyone wish him well?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Yes, half of Indiana camped in the family pasture,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And the minister said, "With luck, he could have been a 
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;minister."
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">And up the sleeve of his oversized gray suit, Johnny twitched
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;a finger.
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Does anyone remember?
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Everyone still alive.&nbsp;&nbsp;And some dead ones.&nbsp;&nbsp;It was a new kind of
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;holiday
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">With hot and cold drinks and hot and cold tears.&nbsp;&nbsp;They planted
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;him in a cemetery
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">With three unknown vice presidents, Benjamin Harrison, and
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;James Whitcomb Riley,
</div><div style="text-indent: -10px;">Who never held up anybody.</div></span>]]>
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	<entry>
		<id>tag:ta-nehisicoates.theatlantic.com,2009://8.20463-comment:218428</id>

		<thr:in-reply-to ref="tag:ta-nehisicoates.theatlantic.com,2009://8.20463" type="text/html" href="http://ta-nehisicoates.theatlantic.com/archives/2009/07/a_break_for_a_bad_man.php"/>
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		<title>Comment from leonardhatred on 2009-07-01</title>
		<author>
				<name>leonardhatred</name>
				<uri></uri>
		</author>
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				<![CDATA[<p>sweet.</p>]]>
		</content>
		<published>2009-07-01T19:43:42Z</published>
	</entry>

	<entry>
		<id>tag:ta-nehisicoates.theatlantic.com,2009://8.20463-comment:218550</id>

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		<title>Comment from KT on 2009-07-01</title>
		<author>
				<name>KT</name>
				<uri></uri>
		</author>
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				<![CDATA[<p>oh, thanks for posting this. I like it.</p>]]>
		</content>
		<published>2009-07-02T00:44:04Z</published>
	</entry>

	<entry>
		<id>tag:ta-nehisicoates.theatlantic.com,2009://8.20463-comment:218626</id>

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		<title>Comment from Karen on 2009-07-02</title>
		<author>
				<name>Karen</name>
				<uri></uri>
		</author>
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				<![CDATA[<p>Damn. That's beautiful. Thank you.</p>]]>
		</content>
		<published>2009-07-02T10:33:44Z</published>
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