Having withdrawn from the existential struggle, Surrendering their arms and protest signs, They muster in Denny’s for the Senior Special Uniformed in knee-pants and baseball caps And Chinese tees that read “World’s Greatest Grandpa,” Hearing aids and trifocals at parade rest, And quadrupedal aluminum sticks Raging against the oxygen machine. Not trusting anyone over ninety, They rattle their coffee cups and dentures Instead of suspicious Nixonians, And demand pensions, not revolution. They mourn classmates dead, not The Grateful Dead. They do not burn their Medicare cards Tho’ once they illuminated the world With their flaming conscription notices. They no longer read McKuen or Tolkien Or groove to ‘way-cool Peter, Paul, and Mary; Their beads and flowers are forever filed In books of antique curiosities Beside a butterfly collection shelved In an adjunct of the Smithsonian Where manifestos go to be eaten By busy mice and slow-pulsing fungi. As darkness falls they make the Wheel, not love
They did not change the world, not at all, but The world changed anyway, and without them, And in the end they love neither Jesus Nor Siddhartha, but only cable t.v.