I was missing English one day, American, really,

    with its pill-popping Hungarian goulash of everything

from Anglo-Saxon to Zulu, because British English

    is not the same, if the paperback dictionary

I bought at Brentano’s on the Avenue de l’Opera

    is any indication, too cultured by half. Oh, the English

know their dahlias, but what about doowop, donuts,

    Dick Tracy, Tricky Dick? With their elegant Oxfordian

accents, how could they understand my yearning for the hotrod,

    hotdog, hot flash vocabulary of the U. S. of A.,

the fragmented fandango of Dagwood’s everyday flattening

    of Mr Beasley on the sidewalk, fetuses floating

on billboards, drive-by monster hip-hop stereos shaking

    the windows of my dining room like a 7.5 earthquake,

Ebonics, Spanglish, ‘you know’ used as comma and period,

    the inability of 90% of the population to get the present perfect:

I have went, I have saw, I have tooken Jesus into my heart,

    the battle cry of the Bible Belt, but no one uses

the King James anymore, only plain-speak versions,

    in which Jesus, raising Lazarus from the dead, says,

‘Dude, wake up,’ and the L-man bolts up like a B-movie

    mummy, ‘Whoa, I was toasted.’ Yes, ma’am,

I miss the mongrel plentitude of American English, its fall-guy,

    rat-terrier, dog-pound neologisms, the bomb of it all,

the rushing River Jordan backwoods mutability of it, the low-rider,

    boom-box cruise of it, from New Joisey to Ha-wah-ya

with its sly dog, malasada-scarfing beach blanket lingo

    to the ubiquitous Valley Girl’s like-like stuttering,

shopaholic rant. I miss its quotidian beauty, its querulous

    back-biting righteous indignation, its preening rotgut

flag-waving cowardice. Suffering Succotash, sputters

    Sylvester the Cat; sine die, say the pork-bellied legislators

of the swamps and plains. I miss all those guys, their Tweety-bird

    resilience, their Doris Day optimism, the candid unguent

of utter unhappiness on every channel, the midnight televangelist

    euphoric stew, the junk mail, voice mail vernacular.

On every boulevard and rue I miss the Tarzan cry of Johnny Weissmuller, Johnny Cash, Johnny B. Goode,

and all the smart-talking, gum-snapping hard-girl dialogue,

    finger-popping x-rated street talk, sports babble,

Cheetoes, Cheerios, chili dog diatribes. Yeah, I miss them all,

    sitting here on my sidewalk throne sipping champagne

verses lined up like hearses, metaphors juking, nouns zipping

    in my head like Corvettes on Dexadrine, French verbs

slitting my throat, yearning for James Dean to jump my curb.

BARBARA HAMBY