The 5th of July

Guest Post by Hardscrabble Farmer

 

“Life without Liberty is Like a body without spirit”

Kahlil Gibran

Independence Day has long been my favorite holiday. My earliest memories center around the picnic-like atmosphere of these annual celebrations, from the deviled eggs and grilled meat to the fireworks displays in the warm Summer darkness. Each year was a nationwide birthday party for the Republic and a means of reminding us of the events that led to our happy lives wherever we lived. I have no doubt that there were those who resented or cared nothing for it, but to me it was the ultimate form of both unity and individualism, even when I barely understood the concepts.

My children have always asked about my childhood as they track the progress of their own and I would regale them with the assorted stories that revolved around this particular day; when Yanna Nikitas threw a cherry Slurpee on my prized yellow Chicago T-shirt and I responded by punching her in her 10 year old face only to be dragged away from the party by my father where I was made to sit in our Buick Skylark until the fireworks were over, soaked in perspiration and miserable.

Afterwards as we drove home in silence we passed a lumber yard that had taken a direct hit from an errant firework and watched as the firemen poured streams of water into the conflagration, my parents faces glowing orange in the darkness and my father reached his hand back to stroke my head, all forgiven. There was the annual rite of my father clipping the reprint of the Declaration of Independence from the New York Times and pinning it to the apple tree in the back yard with a leather handled Estwing hatchet where it fluttered all day in the gentle breeze.

In the Summer of 1976 we watched the tall ships sail up the HudsonRiver and the fantastic, seemingly endless display of fireworks that signaled the Bicentennial and three years later, only days before I was to report for my enlistment in the US Army my closest friends and I hiked up to the top of High Point where we watched fifty local displays of fireworks a thousand feet below us spanning a 360 view of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania as if we were gods on Olympus.

I can’t recall a single 4th of July that wasn’t filled with food, friendship, family and an abiding feeling of what it meant to be free. On the last year we lived in New Jersey, where fireworks were strictly prohibited by the Nanny State, my oldest son and I drove across the Delaware and picked up several hundred dollars worth of rockets and mortars, flares and roman candles and then under the cover of darkness we packed them into my old rucksack and walked a circuitous route along the hedgerows firing them from a dozen hidden locations to the applause and whistles of the people in town.

This year was the first one I can remember when I had no feeling about the day at all. The events of the past several months on the national stage, from the Supreme Court decisions to the kabuki theater of the Fast Track and Trans Pacific Partnership had led me to accept the fact that the country I live in today had changed so fundamentally, so completely from the one I had grown up in that the meaning of the day was no longer valid. Liberty of the type written in that document was no longer present, no longer admired or respected, replaced with the kind of dependence and servitude to a ruling class that is in no way different than the one of King George.

This was the new America and I was an old American and it was time to, as the bible said, put away childish things. I purchased no fireworks, didn’t place the flags along the split rail fence like we usually do, didn’t plan a barbecue, didn’t mention the day at all. There is an annual parade in the village that makes three loops past the 30 or so houses and this year we didn’t decorate the tractor and load up the piglets in the trailer, didn’t even go to the bottom of the hill to watch. We did chores, worked on some unfinished projects and enjoyed the overcast day with occasional sprinkles the same way we did any other.

My wife had made plans for the evening with a couple we are friends with and made sure to not to make a big deal of it. There was a party on the top of a local mountain and we had been asked to stop up if we could make it. I would have preferred to stay at home and maybe get a little rest, but the children clearly wanted to see their friends and my wife had picked up a bottle of wine, so I relented and after a quick shower I dressed and loaded the family into the car. My wife had made some roasted peppers with herbs and garlic and the car smelled like an Italian restaurant.

We made the drive up the logging road to the top of Rowe Mountain with the kids laughing in the backseat and as we parked under the stunted oaks near the summit I put on my game face and took my wife’s hand. The kids ran ahead to find their friends and the breeze picked up slightly in the late afternoon sun. All the clouds from earlier in the day had moved on and the view at the top was impressive; Kezar Lake at the base of the mountain, Concord to the east, Mount Kearsarge to the north, and the various villages of Sutton, Wilmot, Bradford and Warner spread out between them.

There was a huge American flag hung from a locust tree and a small fire built in a granite fire pit, people gathered around it against the evening air holding drinks and talking animatedly. The owner of the mountain, a man whose family had lived on their eponymous hilltop for three centuries, manned a huge kettle of steaming lobsters and clams. The hunting cabin that served as the hub was one the family had built years ago and it was a draw for the kids; a loft, stuffed animal heads mounted on the walls, trays of cupcakes and bowls filled with salads and corn on the cob. My wife found her friend who had brought her camera and was busy snapping shots of the teenagers playing horseshoes, the ever shifting surface of the blue lake below, the flags fluttering in the breeze.

I stood on a ledge with my friend and identified as many points as we could and as the light slowly failed and the temperature began to drop you could see spots of lights appear from a dozen homesteads in the blue forested flanks of the countryside. After a bottle of cold beer and dozen steamers my mood began to change and the old feeling of inspiration and something close to awe began to take over. I looked around the assembly of men and women chatting and resting, throwing Frisbees and eating bright red lobsters with their hands. There were washtubs filled with ice and bottled drinks, the laughter of children weaving between picnic tables with smiles on their faces.

Several young couples clustered together around a hand-built off road vehicle discussing the finer points of it’s design. There were people I recognized, like the fire chief from the company that saved our house when the barn burned down and I approached them one by one to shake hands and exchanged pleasantries. My wife was engaged in a conversation with a woman whose husband owns the largest manufacturing operation in the area and the rest of the crowd was filled with the kinds of people who make the world go ’round; a radiologist and a veterinarian, a trucking company owner and a retired inventor, contractors and butchers, school teachers and farmers.

The mood was so light, the atmosphere so easy and the hospitality so sincere it would have been impossible to feel anything but comfortable and at home. As the valley darkened in the gloaming a few of the men gathered up boxes of fireworks and moved down the slope a safe distance from the party to set up. My friend offered me a sip from a silver flask and the last of my inhibitions and cynical thoughts departed. I was in the moment and aware of the liberty that allowed for us to gather like this on a piece of family land that predated the signing of the Declaration of Independence. In the distance the first blossoms of glowing red fireworks appeared above Concord.

You could see the headlights of cars pulled up along the strip of beach at the lake as the first of the fireworks were lit and for the next thirty minutes the rockets streaked skyward and burst into glowing showers of color, one explosive report after another to the delight of everyone. A pall of sulfurous smoke clung to the treetops and rock ledges and after the finale there were cheers and applause and everyone began the process of saying goodbye and than- you, packing it in and heading back to the clearing where the cars and trucks were parked under the sugar maples. On the drive home the children fell asleep in the back seat and when we pulled up to the farm the dogs were waiting for us in the darkness, tails wagging.

Our oldest son moved into his first apartment a few weeks ago and began his life as an independent man. He chose to work rather than go to college and he is confident with his decision, proudly showing me a recent bank statement that demonstrated his ability to provide for himself. He stops by the farm regularly and has never been happier and I understand why. He has a girlfriend that we haven’t met yet, shaves when he wants to rather than when his mother asks and as much as we miss his presence we delight in his journey into adulthood.

The other day I came in from haying under the full moon, beat from a sixteen hour day, but glad to have the opportunity to provide for my family. Our son had stopped by to pick up something he had left behind and he had his little brother up on his shoulders and the two of them were enjoying the moment under the canopy of trees. They didn’t see me at first and I paused long enough to commit the image to memory.

Looking back this morning it was a week filled with unforgettable images; a bald eagle that circled the farm for half an hour soaring on thermals, a heavy downpour that tipped over the biggest sunflowers and departed to the north leaving a double rainbow right above the house, the air ten degrees cooler and the younger children splashing in the puddles left behind, my wife in dressed in her striped shirt and heels walking beside me and holding my hand as we left the Independence Day party on Rowe Mountain, he lovely face glowing in the moonlight.

Whenever I think that things are sliding towards a future that has left me behind I try to remember that I will always have the past, that as many people who embrace their servitude live out there in the darkness, there are still plenty who love their liberty and celebrate it every hour of their lives. The 4th of July celebrates a promise, but it is how we choose to live each day that follows that determines whether or not we honor it.

Happy 5th of July.

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31 Comments
kokoda
kokoda
July 5, 2015 1:17 pm

In Nov. 2008, after the anti-Christ won the election, I told a small group of people that I would have voted for a dirt farmer (that was a sincere compliment to dirt farmers). They were stunned into silence.
Your writing style is excellent IMO, and I appreciated the tale and meaning.

ottomatik
ottomatik
July 5, 2015 1:42 pm

Thank you.

Chicago999444
Chicago999444
July 5, 2015 2:36 pm

I love this post. Sounds like a crowd of civilized, productive, friendly people having a great time and celebrating their good lives, in a beautiful setting.

Must have been a lovely fireworks display, too – the kind I enjoy.

Stucky
Stucky
July 5, 2015 4:05 pm

“In the Summer of 1976 we watched the tall ships sail up the Hudson River …” —- HF

GLORIOUS is what it was.

About 5 million people saw the Parade of Ships … 16 of the world’s remaining “Tall Ships” …. my girlfriend and I found a place all to ourselves on the Palisades Cliffs. I mean, we literally sat on the edge of a cliff, our feet dangling over a 200 foot precipice. Young and stoopid, watching one gorgeous ship after another.

The one I remembered the longest was the Russian ship … because it was, well RUSSIAN, and we all hated the bastards at the time …. and because it was stunningly beautiful with its black lines.

The Kruzenshtern ….. if it sounds more like a German name that’s because it is. The Germans built it but had to give it to the Russians in 1946 as a war reparation. Fuckers.

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Stucky
Stucky
July 5, 2015 4:06 pm

16 of about 25 remaining tall ships

Stucky
Stucky
July 5, 2015 4:13 pm

Anyway, nice stroll down memory lane from HF. Memories are funny things …

Twenty years from now, in 2035, I wonder if today’s twenty-somethings — like my own kid — will look back and say …. “Wow. I remember back in 2015 when we were really free.”

M. Phillips
M. Phillips
July 5, 2015 4:17 pm

Beautiful writing. Thank you for sharing this. I needed it.

Bostonbob
Bostonbob
July 5, 2015 4:40 pm

HSF,
I’m some what jealous as I spent my day on the 4th, after a long run, cooking. It’s funny how much people do not understand how much work goes into the preparation and finishing of the cooking. For me it was 10 hours of work after my 4 mile run in the morning. My wife complained that I was too tired at the end of the night. I often get you sound exhausted, well I was. Still my “kids” had a great time at 19 and 21. Number 1 son at 21 still is not sure what he wants to do with a degree in Chem E and a minor in Chemistry. He is very unsure of where he wants to go and what he wants to do. It is fun to see your son go out on his own. I think our gift is seeing what our kids do and can do. If I sound tired I am after spending a day cutting the busted up trees in the back yard. I forgot how F’ing hard it was to spend a day behind a chainsaw. Time to cook dinner, thanks HSF.
Bob.

starfcker
starfcker
July 5, 2015 4:42 pm

That’s all nice and everything, BUT. I didn’t hear anything about how many africans were at your little shindig. Or latinos. Women couldn’t vote back then. Did obama approve your fireworks. No confederate flags in new england, thank God. Oops, strike the god reference. Were homos made to feel welcome? Were there handicap accessible accommodations? The founding fathers had slaves, you know.

starfcker
starfcker
July 5, 2015 5:06 pm

All kidding aside, many times I have considered missing social events because my read of the big picture has fouled and distorted my mood. But just the same, I have never walked away from any of those events, no matter how small, without feeling reconnected to what makes people good. Great story.

Gayle
Gayle
July 5, 2015 6:12 pm

HSF

What a wonderful piece. Norman Rockwell could produce several fine paintings from the scenes you describe so well.

I too started the day in a bluish mood. I made a salty lime pie and joined friends for a barbecue and enjoyed a forbidden hot dog and potato salad plus three kids of dessert. Children ran free and happy and got to set off some little pyrotechnics in the street before the big fireworks began.

This morning in church someone performed an especially beautiful version of America the Beautiful. The words “Cheer up” came to me.

SSS
SSS
July 5, 2015 6:53 pm

We have some amazing talent on this site. Hardscrabble Farmer is one. What an enjoyable read.

Rise Up
Rise Up
July 5, 2015 7:43 pm

Imagine if HSF and Jim/Admin wrote a book together. Somehow, I think it would work.

nmb
nmb
July 5, 2015 8:29 pm

A decisive win against the European financial dictatorship in Greece

http://goo.gl/uFzd4I

Rise Up
Rise Up
July 5, 2015 9:09 pm

Our little cul-de-sac gathers each 3rd of July for a get together in the street, leaving individual families the ability to plan 4th of July activities of their own. Lawn chairs and bar-b-q’s are brought out along with tables of homemade sides and store-bought cupcakes and pies. The makeup of attendees changes with the times as new folks move in to homes as others move out, some to retire, some to other neighborhoods or other states. A new set of youngsters has replaced the ones like my own who now are in college—much changes in a community over the course of 23 years that I’ve lived here.

The 4th of July itself was non-memorable, since the wife and I didn’t go anywhere except for our usual early a.m. Saturday coffee outing to Starbucks. The majority of the rainy day was spent reading and doing light housework. No profound reflection of the meaning of the day. For me, those once revered thoughts of dedication to country and flag have soured due to overt government oppression in forms not dreamed of becoming reality, despite the warnings of George Orwell’s “1984”. The country seems to further fracture every month due to some unforeseen cultural battle—this month the Confederate flag, last month gay marriage.

Last night I stepped outside my front door to view the combination of light fog of the damp evening combined with the lingering smoke from fireworks let off by numerous surrounding homes. Then the strobing lights of emergency vehicles 2 houses up from mine stung my eyes. A woman in her early 70’s had suffered a stroke and was being lifted into the ambulance. She and her husband, both retired government and proud Puerto Ricans, are dear friends of ours and were the first to purchase a home here in 1977, long before we moved in. This is the 2nd woman to have a stroke in 2 years here—the other is still having a hard recovery and has not been able to work.

Tonight I sat on my screen porch which backs to woods and listened to the growing cacophony of house air conditioners cycling on and off with cicadas (the loudest insects on the planet) calling out their mating sounds while hundreds of fireflies lit up the lawn and nearby trees like small yellow stars in the distance. As dusk approached an owl flew in and perched on the nearest oak branch about 15 yards away. My thoughts were mixed of prayer for our neighbor, wondering what form the downfall of the USA next be, and gratefulness and longing for the things that once were.

Billy
Billy
July 5, 2015 9:11 pm

How I spent my 5th of July…

Spent this morning drinking coffee and planning the demise of a particular mole that has spent the last two days wrecking the shit out of my yard…

Went from a nice, cultivated yard – that I’ve been working on and improving for the last 5 years – to having shit like this…

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…being dug by a little turd like this.

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CA-CAW, MOTHERFUCKER!!!

My father had issues with moles like this… drove him batshit trying to get rid of them. He finally broke down and bought two traps – these big, spring loaded things with spikes and a pressure plate. You found a mole tunnel, dug out a section, then placed the trap in the dug out section. Mr. Mole comes by and WHACK!… seeya bro…

Now, I could either drive the hours to Mamma’s house and get those old traps and deploy them, or I can drive up to the hardware store and see if they have any (not likely).

When given two options that are equally bad, disregard both and make up some 3rd option that works in your favor.

So, I decided to hunt the little fucker.

I’m standing on the porch. It’s grey and drizzley out… mists… everything is soaking wet and quiet… it’s about 8:30 or so, and I’m enjoying a smoke and a cup of morning coffee… I thought my eyes were playing tricks on me, but no – that mole motherfucker was out there and digging… I could see the dirt move from where I was…

That’s it… I own your ass.

Put down my coffee, go inside and fetch a small .410 shotgun. I use it for zapping Starlings when they get to be too much of a problem.

I creep up on the little puke. I notice he’s reopening the trail I stomped down yesterday… which means if I stomp down the trail behind him, he’s got nowhere to go… except down.

Stomp, stomp, stomp…

The vermin stops moving. So do I. Neither one of us moving. We’re playing the “Nobody’s Home” game… you know, when someone dodgy looking bangs on your front door after 10PM, and you sit there not answering the door – just being quiet, sitting on the couch just to see if they’ll try and come in?

So, we’re both not moving, hoping the other will move first. 5 minutes… 10 minutes…. finally, douchebag starts moving again, but he keeps shifting directions every few seconds…. and about this time, I remember I have exactly ONE round in the shotgun… fuuuuuuuu…. So, my goal is to hit a critter the size of a smallish potato that might or might not be where I am aiming because he is literally underground and I’m sort of guessing where he is based on the ground being pushed up… the shot won’t have time to spread, which means missing is a real possibility….

Fuck it – BLAM!

I got his ass.

I left him in the small crater it blew in the yard… nice of him to dig his own grave like that. Hopefully, any of his buddies following behind him will come across his shredded carcass and heed the warning…

Rise Up
Rise Up
July 5, 2015 9:31 pm

Billy, nice work! (and glad you didn’t hit a toe…).

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
July 5, 2015 10:00 pm

SSS says: We have some amazing talent on this site. Hardscrabble Farmer is one. What an enjoyable read.

Old Billy sounds like Jack London. Could have titled this adventure – “To kill a mole”. I didn’t sympathize with the mole at all, though I should since he suffered the same fate as many who have tangled with Billy here.

Billy
Billy
July 5, 2015 10:38 pm

El…

Har har…

Dude, I have spent years, literally, trying to make this place nice. Cultivate things. And this little piece of shit comes out of nowhere and creates damage all out of proportion to it’s tiny size…

I’m a live and let live kind of guy… the only reason I would mess with anything is that it messes with me first. Something comes to my attention because it’s

1. Costing me money.
2. Costing me labor.
3. Costing me money and labor.

Bunch of Starlings comes by and they shit all over my truck? Okay. You have successfully Gotten My Attention. Getting my attention is not healthy. Things that Get My Attention do not normally last very long.

I’ve hunted lots of things… all sorts of critters, both two legged and four. But never anything underground. Trust me, I would have rather been sitting in the house drinking coffee and eating a cheese danish….. And not standing in the wet grass on a grey Sunday morning in my house slippers – standing like a statue, staring at the ground for over 10 minutes, shotgun in hand – waiting for that little puke to think I floated away or something so he could move so I could blast him…

You can literally stand in my front yard and sweep your arm 360 degrees and you’ll see the hills rolling off into the distance in all directions…. THAT’S the space that little turd had to operate in, but he chose to make an effort at destroying my yard – that’s just plain mean.

SSS
SSS
July 5, 2015 10:44 pm

@ El Coyote

Notice that Rise Up and Billy did their best, and uniquely their own, imitation of Hardscrabble’s excellent command of entertaining prose. To wit:

Rise Up ….. “Last night I stepped outside my front door to view the combination of light fog of the damp evening combined with the lingering smoke from fireworks let off by numerous surrounding homes. Then the strobing lights of emergency vehicles 2 houses up from mine stung my eyes. A woman in her early 70’s had suffered a stroke and was being lifted into the ambulance.”

Billy ….. “It’s grey and drizzley out… mists… everything is soaking wet and quiet… it’s about 8:30 or so, and I’m enjoying a smoke and a cup of morning coffee… I thought my eyes were playing tricks on me, but no – that mole motherfucker was out there and digging… I could see the dirt move from where I was …That’s it… I own your ass.”

What a hoot and treasure this website is. This article and thread prove it.

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
July 5, 2015 10:50 pm

EL Coyote says:

Old Billy sounds like Jack London. Could have titled this adventure – “To kill a mole”. I didn’t sympathize with the mole at all, though I should since he suffered the same fate as many who have tangled with Billy here.
_______________________________

More like Bill Murray from Caddyshack.

SSS
SSS
July 5, 2015 11:02 pm

Billy and the mole …..

“Trust me, I would have rather been sitting in the house drinking coffee and eating a cheese danish….. And not standing in the wet grass on a grey Sunday morning in my house slippers – standing like a statue, staring at the ground for over 10 minutes, shotgun in hand – waiting for that little puke to think I floated away or something so he could move so I could blast him…”

Please stop. My sides are splitting.

Billy
Billy
July 5, 2015 11:22 pm

Z,

That was a gopher.

And I didn’t use plastic explosives… or a scoped rifle.

And I hate golf.

Billy
Billy
July 5, 2015 11:33 pm

SSS,

Dude, the only thing that has Gotten My Attention were the stinking Groundhogs… they undercut the concrete slab of our garage and it cracked. They’re costing me money because now I’ll have to get the concrete floor sorted out… and the tunnel they dug – which I dubbed “The Legion of Doom Headquarters” – seems to be a point of contention… I fill it up, they dig it out. I pile rocks all over the entrance. They dig a new one. I piss down the hole – sometimes even throw dog poo down there – they move over to the barn till the smell clears out….

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I’ve decked them with shotguns. Sniped them from our upstairs windows. They just won’t get the message. I think the only things I haven’t actually used are nerve gas and atomic weapons. I’m thoroughly convinced they were genetically engineered in a secret underground government lab (at taxpayer expense) and either set loose on my property on purpose just to torment me, or else they escaped and ended up at my place by accident…

I don’t mind you all busting on me… it is fuckin funny… and I wrote it up that way because I think it’s fuckin funny, too…

Don’t get me started on the snapping turtles…

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
July 6, 2015 1:22 am

Moles have fucked up the yard at my lake cabin every fall. Every October I go up there and find the berms of dirt they’ve made. So I buy poison and push it into the loam. I don’t know if it works or if winter’s 50″ of frost makes them dig halfway to hell, but they never leave a trace until the following September or October. Good luck hunting, Billy. Blast the little motherfuckers.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
July 6, 2015 5:17 am

Billy said:
“I have spent years, literally, trying to make this place nice. Cultivate things. And this little piece of shit comes out of nowhere and creates damage all out of proportion to it’s tiny size…”

Could be that you’ve succeeded in cultivating things and making them nice…….the wildlife wants to live there too.

Billy
Billy
July 6, 2015 7:22 am

Iska,

Dude, I know right?! I feel your pain and completely understand…

The vicious little monsters do damage that’s all out of proportion with their size. They’re so small, it looks like you could shoplift them. I think those Beanie Baby things are actually bigger than a mole… but if you leave them go for awhile (moles, not beanie babies), when you get back it looks like the Navy shelled your property in preparation for an invasion… like Juno or Gold beach… everyone pooh-pooh’s the issue – until they get paid a visit. Only then do they understand the “Imma get this motherfucker..” smoldering anger and quiet determination…

My old man bought traps that looked like this… if not actually this, then they’re close…

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Lookit that thing! That’s some medieval shit right there… mole comes along and CHONK!!! Adios, ya little bastard… They’re pretty damn effective. He only had the two traps, so had to keep resetting them and moving around… but he won the war.

Those spikey mole trap things are about $25 a piece, so getting several might be tough on the old wallet… but scattering them around the yard would probably bring a certain peace of mind…

I suppose I could have called Dwayne LaFontant, but that seemed a bit excessive…

Billy
Billy
July 6, 2015 7:55 am

Hey Admin…

So many pop culture references can be applied… I was thinking maybe this one…

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Hey IS?

I love having little critters around. So long as they don’t wreck shit and tear the place up. I even tolerate critters coming up on the porch and sneaking the barn cats’ food now and again. It’s when things get out of hand is when I get a case of the ass…

Like the blackbirds… they’ve learned where we put the barn cats’ food and they fly up and sneak food. While they’re on the porch, they take a big old shit. Multiply that by a couple dozen birds and pretty soon your porch is coated in bird shit. We tried passive countermeasures – move the food, but they still show up and shit on our porch. The barn cats are worse than useless. They literally cannot be bothered to defend their own eats. Which begs all sorts of questions, but that’s another story…

curtmilr
curtmilr
July 6, 2015 9:01 am

Beautiful piece, HSF!! Lifted my spirits after the ongoing destruction of constitutional order that we’ve recently witnessed.

THANKS!!

Rise Up
Rise Up
July 6, 2015 5:58 pm

SSS says: Notice that Rise Up and Billy did their best, and uniquely their own, imitation of Hardscrabble’s excellent command of entertaining prose.
————-
I wasn’t trying to imitate HSF. Emulate, maybe, but not imitate. His prose is far above my writing ability.

Update on the stroke victim–she’s in a coma and the family has made the tough decision to pull life support if the results of a final test are not what is hoped for. This will be very hard on her husband since he doesn’t drive. Luckily his kids live not far away and he has a sister local to the area. And all of us neighbors will help when/where we can.