Marin Arts & Culture Premiere Issue April 2017 | Page 13

MARIN ARTS & CULTURE 29

 

Your father would have gotten the  killer,

Schoon was the man’s name, acquitted I’m sure.

If not my father would have pardoned him.

 

Adela Rogers St. Johns, fifty years after

you wrote your father’s life, and death,

is fifty years after my father’s death. 

Re-reading your Final Verdict I remember 

stories my father told me of yours,

of your father’s defense of Darrow

when Darrow was charged with  jury bribery

as he defended the McNamara brothers

in the Los Angeles Times bombing case,

of his ringing defenses in the graft trials

in San Francisco in the years after

the 1906 earthquake and fire,

of his courtroom legerdemain, and fire,

his skullduggery.

 

Your father must have been among

the best of men.  Mine might have been as well,

as near as I could tell.  Like your father

mine was full of passionate intensity.  Yours—

is it true?— never lost a murder case

until his flamed life flickered.  Mine did,

though when asked about a verdict

often as not would respond with old

gallows humor—

 

— I won.

—The jury acquitted your client? 

 —No, they gave him life in prison.

 

 My father became an early public defender,

taking no fee for defending poor men charged

with murdering with dull knives and rusted pistols

or hands, to see they at least had a lawyer

if not justice, that a dark-skinned man

improbably wearing a starched white shirt,

charcoal suit and tie, counterfeit raiment

of  respectability, would take their frantic

early-morning telephone calls, ride out

for jailhouse visits, post gifts to children,

wire money and telegrams to wives

in Montgomery, Brownsville, Hermosillo

and Manila, strive, strain in the courtroom

with the fervor of your father for acquittal,

plead, when the jury had convicted

that they spare his client’s life, pray

when they declined, in the viewing room

in San Quentin, at the hour of execution. 

His grail was the abolition

of that other American barbarism,

     punishment by death.  

 

It is fifty years since my father died

for some same reasons your father died

the same age.  Nations take up arms still,

brandish torches of weaponry, march inexorable

bewildered pilgrims bound for Armageddon. 

Your father was indeed worthy of greater causes.

My father too perhaps, but he

would have been humbled just to be able

to carry your father’s valises and briefcases

to some courtroom of those causes, a

peace conference, or better a final

disarmament table.

  John Briscoe

 

            John Briscoe’s Crush: Wine and California from the Padres to Paris was one of four finalists for the 2016 California Historical Society

Book Award, and, dedicated to Kevin Starr, will be published by the University of Nevada Press this fall.  His essay “The Judgment of Paris,” lavishly praised by California Poet Laureate Dana Gioia, ran in Catamaran Literary Reader last year and is a nominee for both the Pushcart and Best American Essay awards.  Briscoe’s The Lost Poems of Cangjie, published by Risk Press and just released, are translations of recently discovered poems of the Chinese historical figure Cangjie, storied inventor of the Chinese system of writing during the reign of The Yellow Emperor, Huangdi, in the 27th century BCE, approximately 4700 years ago. 

  

Briscoe has published several other books, on history, law, and of poetry.  His Tadich Grill, a history of San Francisco’s culinary scene (Ten Speed Press, 2002), remains a popular history of a colorful and historically remarkable aspect of San Francisco.  His poetry and legal, literary and historical essays have been widely published in literary and scholarly journals.  He has practiced law in San Francisco for 45 years, tried and argued cases in the United States Supreme Court and the Permanent Court of International Arbitration in The Hague, was Special Adviser to the United Nations for the environmental aftermath of the Gulf War, and is a Distinguished Fellow at the University of California, Berkeley.