No, it was not the Wiffenpoof song. While the wise men of Babel are best known for their a cappella version of the famous Whiffenpoof trademark, the song they sang this day is normally set to the music of Those wedding bells are breaking up that old gang of mine. Only, in this case, the words are changed to something about political ambition.
One of the wise men had gathered the news media and a group of supporters in a local restaurant to introduce his new act as a single. He is going for the mayor’s chair. In a fine baritone, he borrowed shamelessly from the late Frank Sinatra’s song: My Way. He quickly segued to I have often walked down this street before to show the media he had the experience. He then told the media in musical terms to Come fly with me but instead of the bar being in Bombay, it was in Babel, of course. It was a bravura performance.
“He left us in the lurch,” complained the wise men’s basso profondo singer. The media found him sitting on the roadway in the mill area of his ward. He had been trying to get the city to put in a crosswalk so that he would win votes from local seniors. A few seniors walked across the road and by him as he talked to the media and they were heard to say something that sounded a bit like: “Who’s that nut?”
The least surprised of the wise men of Babel was the lead (and only) alto. Since she had already declared she was running in the ward of the Wise man who was now running for mayor, she knew she could breathe a sigh of relief. Her only regret was that she always enjoyed doing the solo female part of Don’t sit under the apple tree to his sexy baritone solo part.
What surprised everyone was the lack of response to the announcement by the incumbent mayor. He had his hands full taking remedial grammar and punctuation training at the time but that was only in case he ever wanted to run another advertisement in Canada’s National Newspaper. Quite uncharacteristically, he chose to remain silent about his intentions and opinions.
Not so, his previously declared opponents for the job of mayor of Babel. One of the retreads was actually quite gracious in putting down the person he referred to as his neophyte opponent. He welcomed him to the race and said he also was busy listening to the voters about what they wanted for his city. This is a new and novel approach for him and many in the news media are eagerly awaiting his interpretation of how many bars the people of Babel want in their downtown.
The other mayoralty candidate did not observe the niceties of welcoming the wise man. He went for the jugular. He declared up front that he was holding the wise guy (he probably meant wise man) responsible for all the small tax increases of the past three years. He hardly cared how small they were because he had learned from Ontario’s famous Mike Harris how to save money. “When I am mayor,” he told the news media, “we’ll be able to rent out the top three floors of city hall for condos. Just be careful not to drink the water.”
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