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Published: May 15, 2008 12:20 pm
Old friends, come and gone
I overreached myself at
the Cooperstown Rotary luncheon
a couple of weeks ago.
My intentions were good, but
I think that I left some Rotarians
confused about a
number of things, including
my national origin. More
about that below.
Our British guests, Barbara
and Michael Thrower,
are now safely back home.
They spent two wonderful
weeks with us, weeks full of
reminiscences and laughter
and pleasant travel together,
For Anne, and especially for
me, the time was restorative.
And that’s just what our
friends had intended.
If you drove past our home
during that time, you may
have seen the Union Jack
flying in front of Anne’s office,
which was the Throwers’
American headquarters.
(Michael raised the colors
each morning and lowered
them at dusk. I’m sure he
hummed something apt as
he did so. Perhaps, “Rule,
Britannia.”)
And you may have seen
the four of us tooling around
Cooperstown and the county
as we showed them changes
since their last visit a dozen
years ago.
You may even have seen
Michael and me ambling
around Cooperstown (and
West Winfield and Richfield
Springs) as Michael did some
banking business.
We two looked remarkably
similar in khaki pants
and windbreakers, about the
same age and height. Michael’s
a few pounds lighter
and, as I’ve said, better at
balding than I am; but the
glasses are alike, as are the
moustaches and goatees. To
see us side by side, you’d almost
mistake us for — but
wait. It’s not yet time for the
Rotary story.
The Throwers made a
great hit with the Fly Creek
General Store regulars, who
enjoyed their accents and
good humor. On their second
visit for lunch, staff members
John and Crystal assured
Barbara that they’d taken
trouble to special order “tomah-
toes” for her sandwich.
On his part, Michael delighted
in the repartee that goes
on endlessly in that store —
a kind of floor show without
cover charge.
Anne’s friendship with
the Throwers goes back a
good dozen years, and mine,
a dozen year before that. Michael
was principal of a large
college that developed a linkage
agreement with my college
down in Maryland. The
two institutions exchanged
staff and students; and in
the process the Throwers
and I became fast friends.
After my first wife’s death,
my college’s president and
Michael conspired to have
me sped a sabbatical semester
in England, shadowing
Michael in his job and taking
notes on British higher education.
More than once, at educational
meetings, Michael introduced
me jokingly as his
brother from America. I’d
been sent there, he said, for
safety at the time of the blitz
and had only recently found
my way home.
That separated-brothersreunited
story grew more
elaborate with each telling,
with me playing the part of a
bemused Yank only now discovering
his heritage. It drew
such good reactions from
Brits that I decided to spring
it simultaneously on Michael
and an American audience,
the Rotarians.
Bad choice. I bombed.
The worst thing possible
happened to the joke. Some
took it as literal truth.
I’ve been puzzling over
that ever since and think I’ve
found two causes. The joke
worked well across the pond
because it reflects an attitude
toward Americans that
Brits would politely deny: To
a degree, they still look on us
as errant relatives whose
terrible mistake was to break
away from King and country.
Over here, however, my story
of a lost son finding his way
home had nothing of that
overtone. It sounded, well,
touching.
Jokes are never touching.
I knew the effort was in
trouble inside the first few
sentences. Some Rotarians
were right with me, smiling
knowingly. But a lot, too
many, looked puzzled or lost.
And after the meeting, some
of them asked tablemates if I
really was English by birth.
Oh, my.
If I were given a chance to
retell the story (unlikely), I’d
cast it in the negative from
the get-go: “Despite our close
resemblance, it’s not true
that Michael and I are fraternal
twins, separated by
the horrors of WWII. It’s not
true that our family sent me
to America for safety. (They
were oddly indifferent to Michael’s
fate.)
It’s not true that the tag
on my little overcoat got lost
and that I arrived over here
without an identity, and that
a kindly Annapolis took me
in and finally adopted me.
Not true that fate had me
discover my real roots and
my look-alike brother only in
our late-40s.”
All those “nots” might
have done the trick. But at
Rotary, I cast the whole story
in positive, plaintive sentences.
That worked in England.
Here, it produced a
lead balloon. I have, you see,
a lot to learn yet about story
telling, and especially audience
analysis. “Ars longa,
vita brevis,” as they say.
Anyway, I’m sorry, Rotarians.
You’re a fine, open
bunch, ready to laugh generously
at the most feeble joke.
But I gave you next to nothing
to work with.
Another time, on another
visit, Michael must be the
weekly Rotary speaker and
tell you about his real blitz
experiences as a small boy in
London: His father surviving
the troopship “Dorchester”
when it was torpedoed and
blown from under him. His
mother struggling to hold
the family together, moving
them twice because they
came up from the shelters to
find their successive homes
flattened by German bombs.
And Barbara could add
her own memories of her
wartime childhood in Portsmouth,
a major navy base.
She remembers being
dragged out of deep sleep
and being rushed, stumbling,
down into the neighborhood
shelter as the ground shook
and bombs blew the port to
bits. She remembers leaning
against her mother and staring
across at an old lady
who’d saved one treasure
when she fled her house. The
woman sat cradling a hatbox
covered in faded flowered paper.
In it was her Sunday
hat.
Barbara and Michael.
Those two have real stories
to tell.
Find out about Jim Atwell’s
book, “From Fly Creek
— Celebrating Life in Leatherstocking
Country along” at
www.JimAtwell.com.
Old friends, come and gone
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