Feet in the water
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SHERWOOD KIRALY
On Sunday night, Patti Jo and I went down to Main Beach to watch the
fireworks.
I’m an old hand at fireworks -- an old, severely burned hand. As a
tyke in Missouri, I lit my first Fourth of July firecracker and held
it in front of me until it went off. You may have seen Sylvester the
Cat do this; I did it about the same as he does.
A few years later, I spent a Missouri Fourth with a lit punk stick
jammed in my teeth, aping Robert Culp’s “I Spy” opening, lighting
fuses and tossing firecrackers outward so they went off in mid-air.
It’s a wonder I’ve got any facial features at all.
Now I live in a state where they pretty much leave it to the
professionals, and on Sunday night we parked at Patti Jo’s mother’s
house on Temple Terrace, walked down to the beach and joined a big
cluster of folks, some of whom had been camped since 10 a.m. and all
of whom had somehow parked somewhere.
We hadn’t watched fireworks from the beach in years, and I thought
I was blase about them anyway. I was just going to watch the
watchers, but I ended up gawking at the sky like everybody else.
There were boats offshore and about 10 people hopping and
boogie-boarding in the surf. We sat on the sand as the tide
approached our feet, watching the fireworks bursting, silhouetting
the swimmers. It was preposterously beautiful ... benign explosions.
Just awe, no shock.
The crowd was made up largely of out-of-towners, families,
couples, kids and startlingly free of inebriation.
Afterward, we all spilled into Downtown. Patti Jo and I headed
south, hearing isolated booms behind us and always turning back too
late to see the starbursts. Then we went home, read the Declaration
of Independence and went to bed.
I usually take my own political existence for granted, but we all
redefine ourselves as Americans in an election year, whether we vote
or not. Rather than close with my own material, which can be uneven,
I’d like to supply you with a quote appropriate to our present
situation, both federal and state. I read it for the first time the
night of the fireworks display, in “The Annals of America.” Credit
goes to an early U.S. congressman named Fisher Ames, who died on the
Fourth of July in 1808:
“Monarchy is like a splendid ship, with all sails set; it moves
majestically on, then it hits a rock and sinks forever. Democracy is
like a raft. It never sinks, but, damn it, your feet are always in
the water.”
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