Whist is a partnership game for four players, two against
two.
Member of Congress
Owns a mining explosives supply
company
Bank president
Developer of
porcelain-insulated spark plugs
At the clubs and in the family circle it still finds a
following.
Industrialist
Chief counsel for iron company
Lumber dealer
Involved with real estate
Were it not for the variety known as “Progressive Whist,”
the organizing secretaries of charities might find it difficult to raise such
ample funds.
Art patron
Manufacturer of steel springs
for railroad cars
Dentist
Established in the cracker
business
As might well be expected in the case of a game with a long
and honored life, the rules are many, and precise.
Attorney general
Owner of Banner Baking Powder
Entrepreneur
Window-glass millionaire
It is a universally established truth that trumps should be
led when five or more are held, and none but the most expert player should ever
depart from this.
Tunnel contractor
Minister plenipotentiary to
Turkey
Federal judge
Brother of man who will murder
Stanford White
[from Chestnut Ridge, a verse-history of southwestern Pennsylvania]
**
The South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club was an elite group of Pittsburgh-area financiers, industrialists, government officials, and the like. Members owned a retreat on Lake Connemaugh as well as the poorly maintained dam that kept the lake in place. On May 31, 1889, after days of heavy rain, the dam broke, and 20 tons of lake water poured downstream and into the city of Johnstown. More than two thousand people were killed. At the time, it was called the worst disaster in American history.
Chestnut Ridge features several poems that mention the Johnstown flood. "Whist Drive at the Fishing Club" features the men who controlled the destiny of the region but could not be bothered to avert tragedy.
2 comments:
The construction of this poem is beautiful! It accentuates the stark raeality of the situation.
reality!!
I CAN spell, but apparently can not see!!!
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