She’s gonna be back any second, kids, so we have to scurry about and get in our last licks while the licking’s good.
Someone asked us last Thursday night if we write everything out on paper first — everything: novels, stories, articles, blog entries — and we said yes because this was a bar, and the person didn’t really know us and we felt that awful old urge to try to talk up the book again. In other words, act like a real writer, and we’re all given to understand that they write things out first, paper and pen and cross-outs and arrows and then streams of scrawl when it’s finally going well.
We’ve actually always written on a computer, ever since the Apple //c. But there are others who go the paper route.
The woman who teaches my daughter not to fall off a horse led her through this very quiet, very momentous occasion Saturday: she got my daughter to ride the horse in a figure 8 in the center of this barn. The woman just stood in the middle: a first. Before, she’s only ever been at my daughter’s side, within arm’s reach of her and the horse, but this Saturday was some sort of graduation, which is a good thing. My daughter probably took the move (mid)west the hardest of all of us, and though it’s just kindergarten, she’s been going through all the ABC after-school special kind of stuff: teasing, accidents, fights, loneliness, friend finding and losing. So even though horseriding lessons aren’t the sort of thing you do on an assistant professor’s salary, we did it for her, so it would be hers. All hers. And — this is like another one of those afterschool specials — it’s worked. She’s doing better in school, she’s better on the horse. Two months ago, she wouldn’t go near the animal. Now she’s riding around in figure 8s.
Have her draw them on paper at home, the woman told me after the lesson ended. Mary wasn’t quite in earshot. Drawing them on paper, well, you wouldn’t think it helps, but it does. So have her do that.
We bought peanut M&Ms to celebrate, tuned into NPR for the drive home and heard that Senator Eugene McCarthy had died.
We’re a McCarthy family. My aunt was one of his secretaries in DC, and my dad, after spending a stint in law school and then in the senator’s mailroom, wound up with a gig on the campaign not unlike what Charlie does on West Wing: the body man. My dad was always just behind McCarthy, so he’s in many of the pictures that turned up today. That one in Manchester, NH? That’s my dad under the “vote McCarthy sign.”
We didn’t talk much about the campaign growing up, or we did, and none of us kids understood much about it. We all inherited Ben Shahn McCarthy posters, we caught the odd documentary, but when dad talked about the campaign, if much at all, he talked about the people — the poets, especially. McCarthy was a poet, liked poets, hung out with Robert Lowell on the campaign trail.
You can decide for yourself what you think of his poetry; I think it’s inarguable that he would have been the best poet who’d ever made president (as opposed to vice-versa), and that he wouldn’t have turned over the writing of verse and stories to his pets, as later occupants of the White House have seemed to favor.
He was very funny. I remember that from adult parties in DC, as a kid, weaving in and out of legs and ducking under drinks. I remember him laughing, everyone laughing, and I remember laughing, too, because I so wanted to know what was funny. When I was older, I took my aunt to see him at a speech at Georgetown. He took a question on campaign finance reform, and during his answer, people seemed surprised that he was against limits. Very large donors, with very, very large donations were fine. What about Bebe Rebozo and Nixon, someone asked? That’s a wealthy man possibly assuming a great deal of influence over Nixon. McCarthy’s reply: thank God. You wanted pure Nixon?
No. We wanted you to win.
The last time I saw him was at the funeral for Mary McGrory, the late great columnist of the Washington Post. He was funny and kind, but he was old, too, and his eulogy was difficult to understand. Instead, it fell to McGrory’s Globe-columnist nephew Brian to get the biggest laugh line of the day: “every time I visited her, she made meatloaf, a dish she believed I loved and that she cooked better than anything else in the city…in this, like everything else, she was absolutely unique.”
I never forgave Colin Powell for duping McGrory, and everyone else, near the end of her life. One of her final columns, before a stroke took her life, was of how Powell had convinced her at the UN. And I suppose I never forgave Mary for that final column, “Why I’m convinced.”
And I’m sure there are people who’ve never forgiven McCarthy, not for scaring Johnson out of the race or scaring Kennedy in, not for splitting the left, not for being funny when there were politics to be done, not for being a poet when he was supposed to be a president.
I don’t know. I do know that it starts and ends with writing, somehow, both in the lives led and ended, the forgiveness sought, ignored, or received.
And I know what it was like, early Sunday morning, just this past Sunday, so early, 5:30 maybe, when I was awake, looking out of our cold house at another snowy morning, quiet. Everyone asleep, except for me, worrying about what I’d led my family into, this cold new life, which has an awful lot of great things, but at present, awfully few friends, at least not the sort who’ll run with you on the playground, share your chocolate milk, invite you to their birthday party.
Creaking on the stairs. Our youngest, probably, begging for us to wake up and serve her Cinnamon Toast Crunch, a battle we fight most days, but especially on weekends. No cereal before six, my motto.
But no, it was my older daughter, the rider, and she wordlessly came to my side of the bed, and called to me, “Daddy?” I leaned over. She held up a piece of paper. “I made an 8.”
It was a beautiful, perfect 8, round without being fat, smoothly drawn, no wobbles, and she crawled into bed beside me, and promptly fell asleep. She’s five. She never met McCarthy, nor my aunt, nor my aunt’s sister, her grandmother, her namesake. But she knows how to ride a horse now, she has friends now, school’s OK now, and maybe Milwaukee, too, and so — trust me on this one, Gene — she knows peace.
And that’s a start.
*
And this is an end, folks. For now, at least. I’ve got to finish edits on my wonderful new novel, due out — you heard it here first! — in Spring 07, when TOH better let us back on the blog to sell ourselves silly. And before, then, sure. You’ve got a nice place here. Good people. Great view. You go on and invite us over to play, anytime.