I read an article
recently written by a woman who has decided to study the biographies of bad
presidents to remind herself, not that the current situation is not terrible
but that situations have been terrible before.
This story is not
about that. But in a similar sense it is
about our condition in general not being as startlingly unique as we imagine. At numerous junctures in our history, the past
was resonantly similar to the present, minus inferior dental care and no concern
about gluten.
Plus, I thought it
would be fun to write about.
And hopefully read about
as well. So here goes.
--------------------------------------------------
He wanted to ride for the Pony Express. But his time was rapidly running out.
He had memorized the ad.
(The one Wikipedia labels “the
alleged ad”, although I am presenting
it like it’s correct.)
“Wanted: Young, skinny, wiry fellows not over eighteen. Must be expert riders, willing to risk death daily. Orphans preferred.”
He wasn’t an orphan, but that was okay; the ad did not say, “Dead parents required.” But he was quickly approaching nineteen, and
that was over the “cutoff.” A year
before, his brother Cal had run off to join the Pony Express, and the youngster
wanted dearly to follow in his hoofsteps.
His was a single-minded obsession: To join up and ride for the Pony
Express.
His Pa, he well knew, was against it. The man had lost one son to the Pony Express; he’d be dad-blamed if he’d surrender another. He often caught his son day-dreaming out in
the fields, imagining himself riding like the wind, his hat blowing back but not off because it was fastened with a string – can’t waste precious
time, the mail unnecessarily delayed because his hat blew off and he had to go
back and retrieve it. He knew people out
West were depending on him for the latest news from “Back East.” How else would they know that Lincoln had
been elected president a couple of months earlier? They might have thought they were still stuck
with Buchanan.
But that was none of his Pa’s never mind. Subsistence farming had but one rule: If you don’t farm, you don’t subsist.
With that dire and dreadful understanding, the boy’s Pa was
a punishing taskmaster. He’d catch his child
imagining high adventure on the open plains and call out,
PA: “Till that soil, boy!
Till it!”
BOY: “I am tillin’,
Pa.”
“No, you ain’t!”
“I tell ya, I’m tillin’.
I’m a-tillin’ for all I’m worth!”
“Think fast. Are you a-reapin’
or are you a-sowin’?”
“I’m a-reapin’.”
“Wrong!”
“I mean, I’m a-sowin’!”
“Too late.”
“I’m sorry, I misspoke.”
“This is serious business, boy. Your mind’s gotta to be whole-heartedly on
your farmin’.”
“I know, Pa. But I
cain’t help it if it wanders sometimes.”
“My mind don’t
wander. I’m a-thinkin’ about puttin’
food on the table. And how if we don’t
make it, we die.”
“I'm a-thinkin’ the same thing, Pa. Honest
I am.”
“How many ‘way stations’ the Pony Express have?”
“A hundred and eighty-four.”
“How far are them ‘way stations’ apart?”
“Five to twenty-five miles, depending on the terrain.”
“What are we a-growin'' in this field?”
“Um…”
“There! You see?
“Wheat?”
“Oats!”
“Well all these seeds look the same.”
“They do not!”
(Writers Note:
I do know what I’m talking about.
It is very possible they do.)
“You better get yer head out of the clouds, boy. Or this family’s a goner.”
“Pa, do you know that the Pony Express pays its riders a
hundred dollars a month? I don’t make
nothin’ here, a-sowin’.”
“A-reapin’! Goldarn ya. Yer plantin’ seeds in the wrong
season!”
“I can’t help
thinkin’ about the Pony Express. My
brother Cal’s out there, seein’ the world, a-whoopin’ and a hollerin’. With what he makes, he could provide for the
whole family!
“But he don’t! He
throws it all away, a-whoopin’ and
a-hollerin’!”
“Well, I wouldn’t, Pa.
You know me. I’m scrupulously
diligent.”
“Don’t throw them ‘two-dollar’ words at me, boy. Book learnin’ don’t get in the wheat.”
“You mean ‘oats.’”
“It don’t get in nothin’!
Remind me to whup ya when we get home for sassin’ me. I would do it right here but it would
frighten the horses.”
They work on in silence.
When darkness arrives, they head back to the house for supper, the boy,
followin’ his whuppin’, fidgetting distractedly at the dinner table.
MA: “Eat yer food, boy.”
“I am eatin’, Ma.”
“No, you ain’t. Yer
jest movin’ it around on yer plate.”
“I tell ya, I’m a-eatin’!’
“What are ya a-eatin’?”
“Chicken.”
“It's pork bellies!”
“It tastes like chicken. And mighty flavorful chicken at that.”
“Too late.”
“It is the same thing out in the field. He ain’t a-tillin’…"
“… and he ain’t a-eatin’.”
“Well why would
I? My whole life, I’ve dreamed of
ridin’ for the Pony Express. I turn nineteen,
and that lifelong dream is impossible. Land
o’ Goshen! My nineteenth birthday’s
a-comin’ up fast and I’m stuck here a-tendin’… wheat?...”
“Oats.”
“… out in the fields!
I know how y’all feel about it, but just gotta accomplish my dream. I
just gotta!”
The door flies open and in, covered in trail dust, steps the
boy’s Pony Express-riding older brother, Cal.
“Cal! It’s a
miracle! (HE GETS UP) I’m ready to go, Cal. Join you ridin’ for the Pony Express.”
CAL TAKES A SEAT AT THE TABLE, HUNGRILY COMMANDEERING SOME
VITTLES.
CAL: “Got one word for ya, boy.
‘Telegraph’.”
“What does that
mean?”
"Don't you know nuthin'? They string up these wires all over the place and..."
“I know how it works, Cal. But why are ya sayin’ ‘Telegraph’ out of context like that?”
CAL LOOKS AT HIS FATHER.
“You have no idea what I have to put up with.”
“The telegraph, Mr. Nose-In-A-Book is the wave of the future. The Pony Express is over!”
“What are ya talkin’ about?”
"Our time’s come and gone.
The Pony Express is done for.”
“That ain’t true!”
“Are you sayin’ I’m a-lyin’?
Remind me ta whup ya after I’m done dinner.”
“But why do you keep sayin’ it’s over?
CAL HEAVES AN EXASPERATED SIGH. THEN AS IF EXPLAINING TO A PRE-SCHOOLER, HE
SAYS,
"It’s safer and cheaper sendin’ messages by telegraph. Faster too – no horse ever faster than a telegraph message. Plus
no chuckholes to fall into where your horse breaks his leg and you have to shoot
‘im in the head. No Indians, neither. I don’t know what it is, but them Indians kept
a-chasin’ me for the mail. I ask ya. What good is someone else’s mail to an
Indian? It’s not like anyone’s writin’ to
them.”
“I can’t believe it.
The Pony Express is kaput and I missed the whole thing.”
“Nineteen months – our entire history. And I thought it would last forever.”
“‘Rapid change.’ I
hate it!”
“Amen, brother.
(RAISING A GLASS OF WHATEVER THEY DRINK)
Here’s to the finish of ‘Rapid change.’”
“May it never plague this great country again.”
THE FAMILY CLINKS AND DRINKS, HOPING THAT THE ARRIVAL OF THE
TELEGRAPH WILL BE THE END OF THE “RAPID CHANGE PROBLEM” FOREVER.
THE END
Some point to ‘Rapid change’ to explain the discombobulating
anxiety of huge swaths of the American electorate. But that’s what we do here and we always have.
Its rate of speed may be faster than previously, but the plan for
surviving it remains inexorably the same:
Hold tight and keep a-ridin’.
(Author’s Note:
Another lesson is “Grab onto your dream before it’s extinct” but I elected
to chronicle this concern instead, as
few jobs vanish as quickly as the Pony Express.
Except, perhaps, for Betamax repair
specialists.)
1 comment:
Well, I think I finally understand this after two days. The point of the bad President was in knowing that Buchanan, a bad President, was really out of office and a future great President (although no one realized it at the time), Abraham Lincoln, had been elected. And the Pony Express was the bringer of the good news as opposed to the fake news swirling around that maybe Buchanan was still in office.
I just spent a couple of days researching which President had wanted to be a Pony Express rider, and had a brother named Cal, but never got his chance because they went out of business. I thought the point was that this led him down the path of disappointment and frustration that eventually led to his becoming a bad President. I guess that wasn't the point.
Or was it?
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