Welcome back, Henry, sporting a nice pair of quatrains.
I don't quite follow the third line about Bing's concealing his singing. He crooned in plenty of the "On the Road" movies, no? For now, I'll add him to the list, but if you could clarify or edit?
Mr. Hope goes right in. No problem with the slant rhyme (or perfect rhyme for those of us who pronounce "20" and "plenty" and "Internet" as if there were no "t" in the middle). I did wonder though about the third line's bump over "it was." In olden days, 'twould be 'twas, but that can be avoided by using the "historical present" so that the line becomes "On screen it's Bing who gets the girl."
Jan, I will put a candle in the window for you in hopes of your return over the plains, down the rivers, along the turnpike, appearing on the horizon with the ghosts of Lewis & Clark.
Latest summary of rules:
Must be a deceased American of note.
No more blazers of the Cumberland Gap (Boone)
No more exterminators cum naturalists (Audubon)
No more Vice Presidents who never became President (Agnew)
No more Presidents who were generals with wooden teeth (Washington)
No more father-son President combos (Adamses)
No more South Carolinians (F. Marion)
No more early talkies stars (W.C. Fields)
No more Sixties pop stars (Tiny Tim)
No more cannibals (Alferd Packer)
No more clothing merchants. (Levis, sorry, Wanamaker, Macy, and Roebuck)
No more Vermont poets who couldn't decide between fire and ice (R. Frost)
No more beer brewers (J. Griesedieck)
No more White Mountain painters whose name begins with a "B" (A. Bierstadt, that leaves Thomas Cole et al.)
No more Afro-American female civil rights figures
No more suffragettes who made it onto coins (S.B. Anthony)
No more Texans who ran and lost as VP candidate (L. Bentsen)
No more leading female proponents of birth control (Sanger)
No more boxers who knocked out Archie Moore (Patterson)
No more boxers from Alabama (Louis)
No more lowercase poets (cummings)
No more generals from Michigan (Custer)
No more actors whose real name was Marion (Wayne)
No more Afro-American female emancipators (Tubman)
No more crooners who also acted in screen comedies (Crosby)
No more comics who stand on stage with a golf club (Hope)
Relatives by blood or marriage of previously accepted figures are allowed.
No changes to the subject of previous submissions.
Edits to meter, rhyme, diction, and punctuation allowed.
Multiple submissions allowed.
Two quatrains on the same subject will be allowed if submitted by outislanders within 20 minutes of each other.
Hodge rule: two subjects, two ballad meter quatrains, linked by rhyme scheme, any enjambment of the two quatrains must be such that the first ends grammatically and the next starts grammatically without using conjunctions.
ToC so far:
Adams, J.J. & Adams, J.Q.
Agnew, S.
Anthony, Susan B.
Audubon, J.J.
Bentsen, Lloyd
Bierstadt, A
Boone, D.
Crosby, Bing
cummings, e.e.
Custer, G.A.
Fields, W.C.
Frost, R.
Griesedieck, J.
Hope, Bob
Khaury, Herbert Buckingham (aka Tiny Tim; tentative)
Louis, Joe (ranked most heartwrenching so far)
Marion, Francis
Packer, Alferd (ranked funniest so far)
Parks, Rosa
Patterson, Floyd
Sanger, Margaret
Strauss brothers (Levis, not waltzes)
Tubman, Harriet
Washington, George
Wayne, John