The Night When The World
Came Down Upon Peter Paul Markin’s Head-With Roy Lichtenstein’s 1968 Time Magazine Cover Of Bobby Kennedy In
Mind
By Bart Webber (with the
ghost hand of Sam Lowell on his shoulder)
The ghost of the late
sorely lamented Peter Paul Markin has hovered over this publication long after
his early, too early demise back in the 1970s (and in its sister publications
as well as a quick recent glance indicated starkly to me upon investigation).
Maybe it because we have begun reaching a milestone, 50th anniversary
commemorations of various youth-defining events, maybe arbitrary, maybe as the
late scientist Steven Jay Gould was fond of saying mere man-made constructs and
no more but which has infested a number of us older writers some of who knew
Markin personally and others who have been influenced by the hairy tales of his
existence. (The younger writers mostly, as one told me, could give a fuck about
an old junkie has been who didn’t have sense enough to not try some crazy
scheme to get rich quick in the cocaine trade against the growing Columbian
cartels so what could he expect.) Almost every event during this commemoration
period had Markin’s imprint on it. (We always called him Scribe but I will
stick with his surname here.)
Therefore it does not take
much to flicker a flame if something going back to those days jumpstarts
renewed thoughts of Markin. That happened one afternoon recently when Si Lannon
was on assignment to do an article on the Cezanne
Portraits exhibition at the National Gallery and as is his wont (and Sam
Lowell’s too especially if Laura Perkins is along) he runs up to the National
Portrait Gallery to see what is up there. Not much since the last time he was
there except on a wall on the first floor under the title Remembrance there was Roy Lichtenstein’s famous Time magazine cover
of Robert Kennedy done in the spring of 1968 shortly before his assassination
in California after his primary victory over Eugene in June of that year. Si
was so shaken by that picture that he immediately called me and I thereafter
called a few other guys and the mere mention of that cover got us back to
Markin square one.
See Markin, beyond being
the guy who in our circle named the fresh breeze coming through the land for
what would be called by others the Generation of ’68 and which we thanks to
Markin we were card-carrying members was also far and away the most political
of us all. Saw that any dreams of that newer world he was always hassling us
about was going to require serious changes in the political winds. Moreover
Markin had from I don’t remember how early on but as long as I had known him
tied his fate to becoming some kind of politician, some kind of mover and
shaker in that newer world. As for me I could have given a damn about politics
then since I was starting up my printing business and, truth, was busy trying
to get into my girlfriend’s pants. Not Markin though he had spent that whole
spring working his ass off for Robert Kennedy, had gone up and down the East
Coast trying to recruit resistant students not only to vote for Bobby but get
out on the trail. That student resistance factored in by the fact that Bobby
had not gotten into the presidential contest until after Lyndon Baines Johnson
the sitting President and odds on favored in 1968 to win the election decided
after the debacle of Vietnam, of Tet, not to run and the previously “Clean for
Gene” crowd was reluctant to go with Bobby. Saw him as an interloper.
Here is the beauty, maybe
treachery now that I think about the matter, of that bloody bastard Markin
before Lyndon blew himself up and Bobby entered the fray he was sitting on his
freaking hands perfectly willing to
give Johnson a pass as vile
as Vietnam was against the expected contest against Richard Nixon. Didn’t think
whatever lukewarm and ill-formed sympathy he had for McCarthy’s anti-war
positions he could beat Nixon (or anybody else he once mentioned after the New
Hampshire primary upended politics for good that year with McCarthy’s better
than expected showing-wasn’t Bobby-like ruthless enough). Two minutes after
Bobby announced he called up some Bobby operatives he knew from the Boston
mayor’s fight in 1967 and was on his way.
When Bobby went down I
think, and this is only speculation on my part since I didn’t see him much
after he went into the Army and then afterward headed out to California to
start “a new life,” something went out of Markin, some sense that the whole
thing had been a mirage and that he was doomed. He always thought of himself as
doomed, spoke of it sometimes when he was depressed, or things were tough at home.
So as the ghost of Bobby Kennedy showed up on that Lichtenstein cover know this
the ghost of Markin is right there too.
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