Once upon a time, in a bayou filled with boudin and bourbon, there was a King named Huey P. Long. However, The evil lords of the land, otherwise known as the Louisiana Legislature, made him live in an old prison built in the 1850's. It wasn't suitable for a King but they were determined to make him suffer so wicked were they.
However, King Huey was a mighty King and refused to surrender to the evil Lords. He fought mightily with the Lords but they refused to budge, determined were they to keep him in the dungeon built by Lord Knox. The evil Lords miscalculated, not knowing how brave and bold their king really was. One day they woke up only to find King Huey was so powerful he destroyed his prison as he ignored their petty laws they used to keep him shackled. They shrieked, they cried, they bellowed, they blustered, but they could do nothing for the people loved the King.
The people demanded the evil Lords give their King a home fit for the King. Knowing they were beaten, the evil Lords surrendered and gave the King a grand palace truly worthy of a King. The King having won, the good times rolled on forever in the land of bayous and bourbon.
7 comments:
You can't buy a shitty trailer on a half acre for 150K these days.
Any here who recall the Long political family with speakers mounted atop their cars driving up and down residential streets peddling their populist/socialist preachments in 1950s?
Some people can't take care of what they have and don't appreciate history, architecture or art.
So the let beautiful things go to ruin and replace it with something gaudy and tacky.
The older mansion had more grace and character.
Read more on this and other stories about the Kingfish in T. Harry Williams's Pulitzer Prize winning HUEY LONG. It was published over 50 years ago, so it was untouched by the PC censors and "sensitivity readers" who run today's publishing industry. Best political biography I've ever read.
It was a simpler time back then.
A young man named Edwin Edwards was damn sure taking notes about Gov. Long's
"grass roots" tacticts.
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