Two Poems by Christopher Fried

To The Nation’s Credit

Before he sought the presidential spot
three times, (a losing gesture manifest
in all accounts), he railed against the plots
of slavocracy that had driven the test
of the states, if they should remain. His brother,
at one point, pushed to madness, (what newsmen
had said), knew that men made to rise must suffer
the meting out that causes most to give in.

His friend Fred Douglass knew that service must
be handled with responsibility.
Dear God, Not Mr. Blaine! This antitrust
legislation, the public voice agrees.


Kind words received then helped to face the hushed
retirement, where he sat dull dinners and teas.


Longstreet’s Postbellum Letters

“Bob Lee, you should’ve gone round to the right,
outflanking them that fearsome second day
as then I saw depart from those eyes light
that flickered when came back the wounded gray,
withdrawing from the charge that cracked the south’s
last hope. I knew your stolid heart was bound
with honor for the fallen men. Proud mouths
now closed, the rested were interred in grounds
too many miles from southern soil. Good sir,
I’m still “Old Pete,” your warhorse at command.
Why do they speak as if I lost the war
when only in thought did I countermand
those orders given? ’Cause I sprung my plans
for fostering the brotherhood of man?”




Christopher Fried lives in Richmond, VA and works as an ocean shipping logistics analyst. A poetry collection All Aboard the Timesphere was published in 2013 by Alabaster Leaves/Kelsay Books. His novel Whole Lot of Hullabaloo: A Twenty-First Century Campus Phantasmagoria was published in 2020. Recently, he was an advisor on the 1980s science fiction film documentary In Search of Tomorrow (2022). His recent poetry has been published in Society of Classical PoetsSnakeskin, and WestWard Quarterly, and a new collection, Analog Synthesis, is planned for publication by White Violet Press/Kelsay Books in Spring 2025.

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