I’d like to share a
letter I sent to a dear friend a few weeks ago. First, a little background.
The recipient, “Mildred,”
was known to me for much of the past 35 years as “Mrs Pope.” She was the mother
of my college classmate John Pope. When I first met her in 1977 or ’78 at John’s
family home in Falls Church, Virginia, she’d already been widowed for several
years. She had the kind of formal gentility and Southern grace that perfectly
suited her loyalty to the Old Dominion, Virginia’s sepia-toned nickname. She
was a collection of charming contradictions: forthright and self-effacing,
elegant yet clumsy, both old-school and incredibly open. Our relationship had
been friendly but hardly close until one sunny afternoon sometime in the
mid-1990s.
John and his
brother Jim, whose name you’ll see referenced in the letter, held an annual
summer cookout at Jim’s house in Arlington. Just prior to that year’s event,
John had had a health scare involving a severe headache and his sudden inability
to remember the route to a familiar hospital. Just before Lynn and I were about
to leave—we were standing in the leafy backyard while a by-then-recovered John
stirred the chili indoors—Mrs Pope took my hand and, tearing up, asked me to
pray for her Johnny.
Which I subsequently
did over the course of the next many months, in my questionably effectual
agnostic way. John nevertheless died of brain cancer in 1997. He was only 38.
It was in the years after his death that Mrs Pope encouraged Lynn and me to
call her Mildred, as we got together on occasion to reminisce about John and discuss and admire the wonderful paintings and
drawings he’d left behind. Eventually we moved on to develop a strong rapport and
a friendship in its own right. For whatever reason, the three of us clicked,
and the obvious pleasure Mildred took in our company helped lessen some of the
guilt I felt over the fact that her dead son and I had never been the tight friends she
seemed to imagine we’d been. I mean, I’d always liked John, but he and I had
been essentially admiring acquaintances who’d shared an alma mater. I got to
know him better posthumously through Mildred, and to some extent through Jim,
than I’d ever known him in life.
But if my kinship
with John never was quite real, Lynn’s and my friendship with Mildred deepened
and grew. We visited each other’s homes and kept in touch over the years. When
her health dictated that she sell her house and move into a senior-living
apartment near her daughter’s home in Georgia, I continued to write her
occasional letters and to sometimes phone her.
Nearly two years ago she called me up and, after characteristically thanking me effusively for a
recent letter, then making some small talk, she got to the crux of the matter.
She’d been diagnosed with leukemia and was going to be placed under hospice
care. She was 94 at the time, and she told me she’d already been out shopping
for caskets and was shocked by the prices. We laughed a lot during that call: about
her practicality, the racket that is the death industry, the crazily brief time
we all get on his Earth, who knows what else. I remember getting off the phone
that day and, after wiping a grin off my face, thinking, "Mildred is terminally ill."
As it turned out, reports
of her imminent death proved inaccurate. Mildred would outlive that
six-months-and-out prognosis connoted by hospice care by more than a year. This
made her family and friends very happy, of course, but made her much less so.
Not because her quality of life was so greatly diminished until the very end,
but because she felt she’d somehow overstayed her welcome and perhaps become a
bit of a fraud—like the way Barbra Streisand keeps un-retiring until most
people just wish she’d just be done with it already.
But then, finally, Jim
called me at work one day late last month to tell me the end truly was near.
So, I wrote Mildred one last letter, just before we left for a vacation in New
England.
This past Wednesday,
October 17, Jim called me at around 5 pm to report that his mother had passed away
earlier that day. Her interment will come later this month. I’ll be a
pallbearer, at her request. And a proud one, of course.
I’ll end this post
with the letter and let it serve as my loving sendoff. But FYI, lest you might
wonder as you read, I’ll first make these final notes:
I specifically
mentioned Iceland because Mildred herself had toured that beautiful and strange
country with her daughter in fairly recent years, after Lynn and I had raved
about it and shared our pictures. I hope the reference conjured fond memories
of a trip she told us she’d loved.
Clive and Karen Scorer
are lovely people with whom we had a wonderful reunion on Cape Cod. I mostly was
kidding about Clive’s “British eccentricity” for comic effect. (Americans hardly
have room to talk, our national “eccentricities” being passions for deadly firearms
and divisive religion.)
I did indeed succeed
in adding Vermont and New Hampshire to my running-states list—not that you’d
know it from the appalling lack of national media and social networking coverage.
And the weather did cooperate, though I might have preferred a bit of seasonal
chill in the air.
I always tried to limit
my letters to Mildred to a single typed page, so as not to bore her to death (though
she might have welcomed that as her self-reproach at her earthy lingering grew).
In principle at least, I’m all for brevity. So I’ll close here and let the
correspondence finish this out.
September
28, 2012
Dear
Mildred,
Jim
called me yesterday and told me he’d been with you on your birthday, and that
he’d read to you the card Lynn and I had sent you. While I was happy to know
you’d received that small token of our love, I was saddened by Jim’s use of the
words “read to” and asked him if that meant you no longer can read things
yourself. He confirmed that your abilities to read and write have largely been
taken from you at this point. I remarked that this must be very difficult for
you, given your love of reading and your skill at correspondence. But please
know the Lynn and I always will cherish the letters we have received from you.
I’m
writing this on a Friday. Both Lynn and have taken the day off and have been
busy making preparations for our upcoming vacation trip to New England. We’re
leaving Sunday for Lynn’s mother’s house in East Greenwich, Rhode Island, and
during the course of the week we’ll spend nights in Falmouth, Massachusetts (on
Cape Cod), Brattleboro, Vermont, and Portsmouth, New Hampshire, before returning
to my mother-in-law’s house and driving home from there. The main reason we’re
traveling north at this particular time is to meet up with a British couple who
are roughly our age, Clive and Karen Scorer, who we met during our tour of
Iceland in 1999. We’ve kept in touch over the years, but we last saw them in
the flesh in 2000, when they came to Washington on vacation and we had occasion
to make them dinner (well, Lynn made them dinner—but I did the dishes) and play
tour guide on trips to the White House and the top of the Washington monument. They
will be flying to Boston this weekend to begin an organized bus tour of
Massachusetts and New Hampshire that will focus on history, culture and, of
course, that star of fall tourism in New England, the colorful foliage (which
we hope for their sakes will oblige with a proper rainbow). Their lone
unscheduled day is Wednesday on Cape Cod, so the four of us will spend the day
together. We plan to drive them across the Cape to arty Provincetown, and also
to indulge Clive’s request to visit a local kaleidoscope store, as he collects
same.
Speaking
of Clive’s hobby, which strikes me as being a very British sort of eccentricity,
I’ve suggested in the past that my friend really lays on the British thing a
bit thick, given that he’s already named “Clive” and lives in a town named
“Biggleswade” He has not, frankly, rebutted the charge. In fact, I wouldn’t be
a bit surprised if he and his wife were to have us scouring retail districts
for tea cozies, monocles and suchlike before the day is through.
Although
from everything we’ve read both Brattleboro and Portsmouth are lovely towns,
the main reasons we’re visiting them is to satisfy my own eccentric pursuit and
because they were among the few places we could secure lodgings at fairly
reasonable prices during Leaf Season in New England. The eccentric pursuit to
which I’m referring is my determination ultimately to run in all 50 states. My
own idiosyncratic definition of what constitutes a run is one uninterrupted
hour. (I’m writing the word “run,” but at my speed think “jog.”) I’ve been
stuck on 30 states for several years now, and Vermont and New Hampshire are the
only remaining East Coast states that somehow have eluded me to date. So, Lynn
has graciously agreed to abet my efforts by routing our trip accordingly. I
just hope for decent weather, or at least rains that are short of monsoonal.
Because I’m pretty much determined to make like the Post Service and let no
conditions keep me from my appointed rounds—um, runs.
This
will be the first real vacation (more than a long weekend) that we’ve taken in
a very long time. We’re greatly looking forward to it. But first, I must get
back to the aforementioned preparations! So, our very best to you. And, of course,
as always, our love.
Eric
2 comments:
'Mostly' kidding?
I had no idea you stayed in touch with John's mother. I once got a lovely card from her; I can almost picture her. Condolences for the loss of your friend.
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