John Steinbeck Quote
"Adlai,
do you remember two kinds of Christmases? There is one kind in a house
where there is little and a present represents not only love but
sacrifice. The one single package is opened with a kind of slow wonder,
almost reverence. Once I gave my youngest boy, who loves all living
things, a dwarf, peach-faced parrot for Christmas. He removed the paper
and then retreated a little shyly and looked at the little bird for a
long time. And finally he said in a whisper, "Now who would have ever
thought that I would have a peach-faced parrot?"
Then
there is the other kind of Christmas with present piled high, the gifts
of guilty parents as bribes because they have nothing else to give. The
wrappings are ripped off and the presents thrown down and at the end the
child says—"Is that all?" Well, it seems to me that America now is like
that second kind of Christmas. Having too many THINGS they spend their
hours and money on the couch searching for a soul. A strange species we
are. We can stand anything God and nature can throw at us save only
plenty. If I wanted to destroy a nation, I would give it too much and
would have it on its knees, miserable, greedy and sick. And then I think
of our "Daily" in Somerset, who served your lunch. She made a teddy
bear with her own hands for our grandchild. Made it out of an old bath
towel dyed brown and it is beautiful. She said, "Sometimes when I have a
bit of rabbit fur, they come out lovelier." Now there is a present. And
that obviously male teddy bear is going to be called for all time MIZ
Hicks.
When I left Bruton, I checked out with Officer
'Arris, the lone policeman who kept the peace in five villages, unarmed
and on a bicycle. He had been very kind to us and I took him a bottle of
Bourbon whiskey. But I felt it necessary to say—"It's a touch of
Christmas cheer, officer, and you can't consider it a bribe because I
don't want anything and I am going away..." He blushed and said, "Thank
you, sir, but there was no need." To which I replied—"If there had been,
I would not have brought it."
Mainly, Adlai, I am
troubled by the cynical immorality of my country. I do not think it can
survive on this basis and unless some kind of catastrophe strikes us, we
are lost. But by our very attitudes we are drawing catastrophe to
ourselves. What we have beaten in nature, we cannot conquer in
ourselves.
Someone has to reinspect our system and that
soon. We can't expect to raise our children to be good and honorable men
when the city, the state, the government, the corporations all offer
higher rewards for chicanery and deceit than probity and truth. On all
levels it is rigged, Adlai. Maybe nothing can be done about it, but I am
stupid enough and naively hopeful enough to want to try. How about
you?"
Yours,
John
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