The Grade Savior

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Author’s note: Mr. Tom Morgan, center, and a former star-student Loretta (Franciose) Goolbsy last month at the Art Walk, in downtown Charleston, West Virginia. Mr. Morgan taught English Composition for the college bound at our high school, and I never learned more in a class. He was an inspiration and 35 years later I was proud to be able to hand him my second novel. Thanks for reading! A.S.


 


In a town that was booming from a chemical craze,


A time not forgotten, but most certainly changed,


The vitality caused by the brilliance of many,


Their children raised with expectations a’plenty.


 


Inside walls that held so many young minds,


Was a wizard of sorts, who gave sight to the blind.


The tool that he used was his Grade Saver Sheet,


From a standpoint of learning it couldn’t be beat.


 


Prepositions, slang, expressions deemed trite,


The comma, if questioned, must take a quick hike.


If you naively asked how to spell a tough word,


D-I-C-T-I-O-N-A-R-Y was what you heard.


 


Compositions completed was just half the fight,


Cause a pronoun misused dropped your “A” out of sight.


“Express, not impress,” his writing decree,


Two spliced indie clauses a comma fait accompli.


 


“A lot” was a place and if it made your paper,


A great deal of anguish was soon to come later.


If you shifted a tense, or let a sentence run on,


Used You and Your pronouns, you best just be gone.


 


You could take those themes on with you to college,


’Cause the 101-ers you met didn’t have your knowledge.


Just correct, re-write and turn them on in,


With the time that you saved you could go for a spin.


 


If you look back with less than a smile you ain’t tryin’,


And if you say you learned little I just ain’t a-buyin’,


And if “ain’t” was uttered, he would show no restraint,


Tom Morgan, by God, would express his complaint.


 


© 2017


 


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Published on October 07, 2017 16:32
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