Sunday, December 4, 2011

The Verdict


'Lunch' ~ George Tooker, 1964


The Jurors

locked in a small room
hunched over their plates
eating in silence

weighed down
by the sheer magnitude
of what they are asked to do

a cross section of Americans
his peers

numbers one through twelve
no names

ready to examine the evidence
without theory or conjecture

do their civic duty
serve up a just verdict




54 comments:

  1. nice...i always think about that movie they had us watch in english...12 angry men when i think of juries...interesting and fresh take on the prompt...

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  2. Great take! I thought of your jury duty stint as I read it.

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  3. Smart woman- I like this a lot. I have served 3 times on jury duty-awesome responsibility.

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  4. Excellent read. I never thought of juries.

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  5. I've been called, but never chosen. I love that you thought of the lunch people as jurors...that's interesting.

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  6. I didn't occur to me that they might be jurors...brilliant!

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  7. Oh, nice take on the painting! I've had jury duty. I know how this feels.

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  8. What a unique and awesome take on the prompt Helen.....love it!! :-)

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  9. Loved your unique take - and even counted just to make sure!

    Like the new man in your life in your headline banner.

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  10. that's tough!.. when we do our decision in one thing we always love second or third opinion, but for them, it is what it is as how they think about it.

    JJRod'z

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  11. I love this! Really original (and it wasn't an easy Magpie!).

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  12. The jury is out and in the cafeteria eating balogna sandwiches. Love this original take; pure genius!

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  13. Do you know I've NEVER been called to jury duty (& I'm 47!)? My husband has at every place we've lived - but he hasn't ever had to actually serve on the jury yet.

    This is a great poem about the process & how it probably would be eating your lunch with those other peers.

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  14. Not an easy task, but one that still feels fairer than most.

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  15. Helen, only one who experienced it, I guess can come up with this. Most thought provoking!

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  16. Oh, a jury never occurred to me! Good idea!

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  17. I always fancied serving on a jury - but now I'm to old, they tell me! Bummer! ♥

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  18. ha..that was the first thing I saw too...an eerie place of strangers...who like it that way

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  19. Helen ....thankyou for popping over to my blog...what a great piece of music, what voice control and how sad!
    Glad that you remembered the rice...seems like it was the fruit that made it special!

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  20. Oh silly me ...I meant to also write that I found this poem very moving and so precisely written that the thoughts behind it all were so clear.

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  21. Thank you Dear Helen ~ for looking in on my blog and leaving your kind words.
    I have enjoyed your wonderful vision expressed so vividly. I so dearly appreciate the artistic, poetic mind as it immerses itself to open upon the archives of it's experience and set it before the eyes of others framed with the emotions of the memory of that event. So wonderful to experience with you again. I Thank You for sharing your journey here.

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  22. Ah jury duty...Love how you saw it in this picture...

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  23. Jury duty. Oh, yes! An experience, for sure, and the image fits right in.

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  24. Jurors, such a clever take. Exactly how I would picture them too, deep in thought, weighing the evidence in their heads while eating in silence. Excellent!

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  25. Oh wonderful Helen! What a great idea and so very plausible. Nice write.

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  26. This puts the reader right there! Wonderful.

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  27. I've never had to serve on a jury, but I could imagine it a very hard task.

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  28. Nice take on the prompt- the silence required by jury duty- been there, done that! Much too difficult for me though- I love to talk too much!

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  29. I get the feeling these serious folks are coming in with a guilty verdict..great take...Wow!!

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  30. Fantastic! Quite the opposite from Bingo.

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  31. Loved the poem :) ... Reminds me of a movie I once saw.. something called "jury duty".. not sure.

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  32. ...but not until they have eaten! :)

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  33. Nice variation on this Magpie picture.

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  34. Cool take on this prompt. Nice magpie!

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  35. One of the best Magpies, this time around, Helen.

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  36. An interesting thought, jurors, though it was nothing like that when I was one - I'm glad to say.

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  37. I liked your take and counted too! Never considered jurors.

    Anna :o]

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  38. wow, nice take.
    thank you for your compliment.

    =)

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  39. Brilliant, Helen. You really got to the gist of this painting. I think the artist would be honored by this poem.

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  40. I like the way this poem has them poised before beginning the deliberations. I did jury duty once; it was among other things a fascinating insight into human nature, as people responded in all sorts of different ways to the task.
    We didn't get a meal brought in! It was a fairly minor case and we were allowed to go out and get our own lunch, and also go home overnight; just had to promise solemnly not to discuss the case with ANYONE.

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  41. Jim here -- I have been on jury duty several times, I like it. Once we compromised on manslaughter when it rolled to Friday night. We didn't want weekend duty or coming back on Monday. I wonder if trump's jury also wanted an end before weekend or coming back on Monday?
    ..

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  42. Yes, one does always hope the jury is impartial enough to give justice her due. Nice thoughtful poem.

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  43. I've avoided this tasks so far - but I like your exploration of this duty.

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  44. I've never been chosen for this duty, but I am glad for those who take this civic duty seriously.

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  45. This is so clever, Helen. I love your interpretation of the painting.

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  46. I must say this is a great take on the image. Most will see it as a cafeteria with office workers.
    Anyway, you have written so well about the great responsibilities of a jury.
    We do not have a jury system here. The judge (or judges) hears and decides the case. The debate is still out there on which 2 system is better.

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  47. Sad that quite a few poets here are no longer with us. Feels strange....Rall

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  48. Although some poets are no longer with us, hopefully their work and auras remain. What is still with us, thankfully, is the jury system currently dispensing at least some accountability to someone who badly needs it. The impact of what they have decided will long remain in history.

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  49. Very nicely done and great poem - great reflections

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I appreciate each of you and the comments you leave ~~ thanks so much.