Ah, yes, practice, practice
and we, too, might make it
to Carnegie Hall. It must be
said that our Great Innocent
has certainly seemed to have
prevailed in his battle with
stage fright, by the simple
expedient of reversing rĂ´les,
excoriating his remarks with
his own voice. But now he ar-
rives at the netherest of in-
fernal gates, Capitol Hill,
to emit such sounds all over
again. We had only one, lin-
gering reservation of anxiety
for him, born of occasional
distraction by multi-tasking -
but what was I going to say?
For, improvisation and the
Great Innocent are not the
most salubrious of combina-
tions. History has noticed.
He might have begged us, for
example, to stay tuned last
week for a crescendo of ven-
geance on the 9th Circuit's
ruling against his policing
farce, only to swerve off-
noggin with frettings about
his interlocutory magnitude.
He doesn't need a script, he
he needs a valet de chambre.
Ah, but seated just above
him, all will be provided.
Or, what's a Paul Ryan for,
if not to keep a guy on his
mark, to fulfill his part?
A delicate whisper, is all.
There'll be no forgetting
what to say, at taxcutting
time, no sweet idylls in
Crimea, while bankers lie
weeping in their chains.
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