“Given the kinds and numbers of problems our country has faced and flubbed over the last decade or two, one might think that the forthcoming jubilee would be subdued, retrospective, elegiac, maybe even prayerful. Given our native bumptiousness and ebullition, though, one might be certain that the party would be big, noisy, brash, and pointless.”
L.E. Sissman is writing in
anticipation of the big one, our country’s much-ballyhooed 200th
birthday. The title of his essay gives it away: “The Bicentennial B.S.” That comes
close to summing up my sentiments at the time, though my memory associates July
4, 1976, with a less momentous event, one of my closest of close encounters with
law enforcement. I have a flicker of memory: I’m on the roof of an apartment
complex garage in Youngstown, Ohio, throwing M-80’s into the neighbors’ yard. I
had never done such a thing before and never did it again, but that’s what
alcohol can do – turn you into another, less ingratiating person and release
your inner asshole. I was twenty-three. Apparently a couple of cops talked to me and, thankfully, I
wasn’t belligerent. They let me go, probably with a warning. The last thing I
need after forty-five years is a criminal record.
I remember none of that.
It always comes to mind when I recall Tom Wolfe’s phrase: “this wild, bizarre,
unpredictable, Hog-stomping, Baroque country of ours.” That was me, briefly,
and our country. One of the books I was reading at the time was prophetic: the
novel Disturbing the Peace (1975) by Richard Yates, the story of an
alcoholic bouncing between psych wards and rehabs.
When we were kids, the
Fourth of July signaled the symbolic mid-point of summer. Two months to go but
it was all downhill until we were back in school. My family camped and fished at
a private lake owned by a police organization. That is, most of the kids did.
The grownups played poker on picnic tables and drank impressive quantities of
beer. Most of the men were cops. My father was an auxiliary policeman. On the
night of July 4th, they broke out the illegal fireworks and other
pyrotechnics they had seized in the line of duty. That’s how I got every
bicycle I ever owned. I still like a good 4th of July fireworks display,
from a distance, but I haven’t thrown an M-80 or other explosive in forty-five
years.
You’ll find Sissman’s
essay in Innocent Bystander: The Scene from the 70’s (1975). He died of
cancer eight months after the Bicentennial. In his first book of poems, Dying:
An Introduction (1968), is a six-page, eight-part poem titled “The
Marschallin, Joy Street, July 3, 1949. It’s a portrait of Mona Mountjoy, a
lonely, aging Boston matron. She watches the Fourth of July fireworks from her
window:
“A small white integer appears,
Bears a huge school of
yellow pollywogs,
And, with a white wink,
vanishes. The boom
Takes twenty-seven seconds
to arrive.”
Soon, the display dies
down:
“The last man-made stars
burn
Out in the west, the last
spectacular
Dwindles to darkness in the
captured fort.
The dandelions of light
now go to seed.”
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