Whitie is standing in front of the picture window gazing out, cussing
under his breath and fretting. I know the pose. Spick and span glass ashtray in
one hand, lit Pall Mall in the other, sharp-creased khaki pants, immaculate
white t-shirt and worn but buffed Florsheim oxfords. Civilian though he may be,
clean-shaven and impeccably groomed, he’d pass the inspection of any regimental
sergeant major at any hour of the day. He is as obsessive-compulsive about his
ashes—every one tipped carefully into the proper recipient, none ever falling
elsewhere, the ashtray wiped clean after each smoke—as he is about everything
else. And this time it’s the lawn that has come under his unforgiving scrutiny.
“What’s the matter, Dad?” I ask.
“Goddamn weeds,” he mutters. “No matter how hard you try and have a nice
lawn, there’s always weeds.”
I stand behind him and peer out over his shoulder. I say, “I think the
lawn looks really nice. In fact, I wish we’d leave it a little longer.”
“Oh, Dan,” he says, “it’s long as hell
already! I’m gonna finish this cigarette and then go out and mow it.”
“Want me to?”
“No. Thanks anyway, but, honestly, I don’t like how you do it. You never
overlap enough and there are always these long blades of grass standing up when
you’re done.”
“Suit yourself.”
I look out at the lawn, and what I see is a lovely carpet of deep dense
green grass ornamented here and there with sparse patches of bright golden
dandelion flowers. Beautiful when they flower, sensuous when they go to seed
with their little domes of fuzzy white lace, I find them an artistic accent to
an otherwise uniform verdance. I’m thinking that such a lawn could well inspire
a pattern for a pretty summer frock. Meanwhile, Whitie is thinking about how,
as soon as he takes the last drag on his Pall Mall, he’s going to go out there to
gleefully decapitate every single one of those little bastards.
Ours is a rural small-town, white Midwestern society. It’s not a place
that rewards diversity. And every person’s lawn is measured by how much it
resembles a golf course, not a fallow meadow, so weeds of any sort are anathema
to the bulk of the home-owning population. People have been known to petition
the municipality to require lackadaisical neighbors to manicure their lawns. A
neighbor who allows his or her grass to run wild, they reason, lowers the
property value of the surrounding lots, and, worse still, permits weeds to
propagate and spread from there to kingdom come.
My mother’s father had a practical view of dandelions. They weren’t
weeds, they were greens. He was a country boy and didn’t think spring was
spring without dandelion greens. He taught me from an early age how to use my
pocketknife to harvest them while they were still tender. Right in the middle,
right where their single flower stem emerged, you stabbed them deep in the
heart. Then you removed the knife, took hold of the entire plant at its base
and pulled. This was best done after a nice rain, so they came out by their
roots instead of your ending up with a handful of loose leaves. It killed two
birds with one stone, or so he said, since the weeds got pulled up by their
roots—which was supposed to be a permanent solution—and you could get a nice
bunch of greens into the bargain. Still, it seemed that each year there were
always plenty to harvest.
Grandpa used to bring a dishpan full to my mother, Reba Mae, each year,
because he not only carried out this meticulous task at his home, but also at
the local cemetery, where he was the caretaker. For the twenty years that he
held that post after moving to town from the country, Greenlawn Cemetery lived
up to its name—always neat and green as a formal garden and each and every
grave mown and clipped to perfection.
As a young boy, I was proud of this gardening skill my grandfather had
taught me and was always glad to help harvest greens in the dandelion season,
but I was no fan of dining on them. Former farm girl that she was, Reba Mae
loved them and made them “wilted” with vinegar and a little sugar and stewed
with a nice ham-bone. But she was about the only one in the family who ate
them. Certainly not Whitie, who, a city boy, said that if supermarkets existed,
he didn’t know why the hell he should be eating weeds with his pork chops.
When you drove around a town like mine, the great majority of homes had
the sort of lawn Whitie and Reba Mae aspired to—some more, some less perfect.
But the effort was in some stage of being made. The most established of lawns
were picture perfect, an unbroken carpet of single-shade green, achieved
through the combined liberal use of weed-killer and urea. Well, except at my
father’s father’s house. At Grandpa Murel’s place, the cure-all for home and
garden was manure. He would go out to the speed barns at the County Fairgrounds
to collect it and he put it on everything—the vegetable garden, the flowerbeds,
the strawberry patch and the lawn. When Murel started spreading manure, you
wanted to get out of the way. Because if not, he was sure to find a use for it
on you as well.
In those perfect lawns, any trees were carefully pruned and every random
leaf or twig raked, flowers all contained in geometrical flower-beds, tulips
here, roses there, salvia to make a nice tidy border, geraniums like bookends
on either side of the porch, each
species with its own cedar-chip mulch providing a uniform look to the surface
of the soil. In the old yards, there might be a picket fence or a set of
bordering hedges, fussily trimmed to squared perfection. But in the “new
additions” on the outskirts of town, like the one we moved to when I was twelve
and where Whitie and Reba Mae would live for forty-two years, lawns blended one
into another, preferably in continuous visual sequence. And if that wasn’t the
case, the offending neighbor (yard slob) was sure to hear about it from the
aggrieved parties next door.
This obsession with uniformity wasn’t hard to understand. Most of us
were the descendants of German and Scots-Irish farmers. We came from families
that lived on basically flat land and valued straight crop rows and fields with
no weeds. I used to get tickled when I was a kid and we would be driving
through the countryside and Reba Mae would say sarcastically that a corn or
bean crop would “have to be sold for succotash” whenever there was corn coming
up in the beans or beans in the corn. For farmers there was nothing quite as beautiful
as an impeccable carpet of a single crop.
Christina's World by Andrew Wyeth |
One of my favorite paintings is Christina’s
World by Andrew Wyeth. Apart from its haunting subject—a young woman in a
simple house-dress and country oxfords half-prone with her back to the artist
in a fallow meadow, gazing tensely toward a house in the distance—I love how
the painter captured the texture of the grass, and the feeling that a light,
late-summer breeze is slightly ruffling it, as it is the woman’s long hair,
which is tied back but with a few wisps breaking free. As a boy, I wanted grass
to be like that, for it to wave in the wind, to bend with the breeze, to tassel
and re-seed itself. I wanted country grass, not suburban grass. I wanted grass
a cow or a horse would be tempted to graze on. So I was fascinated and would
stop a while to drink it in whenever I saw a house where the lawn had been
allowed to get a little out of hand.
There was a farmhouse a mile or two outside of town that reminded me of
the one in Christina’s World. A
rambling old two-story house that hadn’t been painted in decades and was the
natural grey of well-weathered wood, crowned by a red-rusted, gabled, sheet
metal roof. There was a barn out back, of the same matte-grey lumber as the
house. The only sign that anyone lived
there was a very tidy little vegetable garden to one side, which seemed
incongruous compared with the rest. The yard had been let go as much as the
buildings had, and the grass that grew up to the edge of the wood-plank front
porch was knee-high. It waved in the breeze like wheat before the harvest.
More than once as we drove by, I’d heard my mother say, “If somebody
held a paintbrush up to that house, it would suck the paint right off of the
bristles.” And then she would add, “They’ll need a scythe to cut that grass.”
But I found the place enchanting, and all I could think was that it was exactly
where I would like to live.
Why couldn’t you just let your yard go crazy? Who said everybody’s place
had to be neat and tidy? What was the big deal if the property was yours? Why
couldn’t you do whatever you wanted with it if you weren’t hurting anybody with
what you did or didn’t do and if that’s what gave you joy? Why conform to
common practice?
Imagine my delight, then, when we lived, for the three years before we
moved to the house in the “new addition”, in a big old house in town that
fronted on the main residential street and the rear of which was on another
major thoroughfare, but the yard of which was in the style of a different era,
before housing “additions” became a thing.
There was a huge old sugar maple on the one side in front and an
enormous cedar on the other. Cedar spreaders ran along the front. In the little
door yard at the back there was another centenarian maple and the most wonderful
lilac, as tall as the garage. The backyard proper boasted another ancient cedar
and another towering maple. Hedges separated the different parts of the
property and the previous owner had let them “get out of hand,” according to
Whitie. While they lasted that way, I thought they were grand.
Despite the fact that Whitie got my mother’s father to come over with
his hedge shears and fashion the hedges into even, waist-high, green blocks,
and in spite of his own obsession with mowing the grass to perfection with a
hand-mower, it was hard to ruin the natural beauty of a yard with that many
trees—which was part of the reason we would shortly move to a place in the new
addition where Whitie could start concentrating on turning the uninspiring lawn
into a veritable golf green (despite his distaste for golf, and the country
club crowd who played it).
But what truly excited my interest when we lived in that big house in
town wasn’t our yard as much as one catty-cornered across the street at the back
of our place. And the owner of it was as fascinating as was the environment
that he had created around him. Everybody tauntingly referred to him as “Jungle
George”.
George was, they said, a retired professor of some sort—law, some people
said. I still find it hard to imagine a man as retiring and reclusive as he was
standing in front of a classroom, but perhaps he had been more outgoing in his
youth. But I never saw more of him than glimpses on his porch or in his yard,
and we never seemed to run into him anywhere else around town. His hermit-like
nature had, for us kids, turned him into something like the Boo Radley of our
neighborhood.
The house was set back from the street, a plain enough place with a
modified A-frame roof and a long low porch across the front. A narrow cement
walk led to the porch from a waist-high wrought-iron gate in a simple
wrought-iron fence that ran all along the sidewalk at the front of the
property. What was extraordinary was the yard, a big one by town standards, which
was plain and unremarkable for its topography, but that had, over many years,
been turned into a patch of wild woodland with enormous trees that loomed over
the house and a dense undergrowth of flowers, plants, shrubs and vines of every
sort imaginable. It was like the overpopulated botanical garden of a mad
scientist. So dense was this miniature forest that the house lay in a kind of
permanent gloom, only penetrated by random rays of sun that spotlighted this or
that tree or plant, or that fell in a dust-mote column across the front porch.
George’s house was on a corner. The west side of his yard bordered on a
one-block-long street. My friend Steve’s back and side yards gave onto that
street as well. So from that side, Steve and I could observe Jungle George’s
property any time we pleased. My mother never worried about me when I was with
Steve. He was ten or eleven when I was nine or ten and was a very responsible
kid for his age. It was like leaving me with a big brother, especially since my
parents knew his to be unquestionably decent people, and Steve’s father was
almost always there, since he was a cabinet-maker who had set up his shop in
the detached two-car garage at the back of their lot. There were only two
properties on that side of the street—Steve’s and that of his neighbor, Forest,
whose son Dick had set up a marine motor sales shop in their garage, with the
two shops sitting back to back. George’s was the only property on the other
side, with a narrow alley running along the back leading to his hidden garage,
followed by an abandoned lot that was wilder and woolier than his place and
that, for all I know, he may have owned as well, because no one ever bought it
and built anything there.
Sometimes when Steve and I would stay out a while after dark to go
hunting for the nightcrawlers that we used for fish bait, we would see a light
in the low basement windows at George’s place—or, better said, we got a glimpse
only, piercing the thicket of shrubs and trees. Once I told Steve that other
kids had told me that Jungle George was a kind of Dr. Frankenstein, who had a
laboratory in his basement and did god-knows-what down there at night. They
also said that he was a widower who had killed his wife and buried her behind a
wall down there.
“You gotta stop listening to those dumb-asses, Danny,” Steve told me
with a laugh. “They’re full o’ crap. I figure he’s got his gardening stuff down
there. He’s always doing something with his plants. Gathering bulbs and seeds,
re-potting, whatever it is guys like him do.”
“How would you know?” I asked, preferring to believe the Frankenstein
and walled-up wife stories.
“Because I’ve talked to him.”
“Really?”
“Sure. He’s a nice ol’ man, just strange, is all.”
I wasn’t so sure about that. But Steve—whom I already held in high
regard just because of how he was, but also because he had built his own
bedroom furniture in his dad’s shop, and had given Stan, the neighborhood
bully, whom we all feared, such a beating that Stan had run home bawling and
holed up in his house for days afterward—had just become even more of a hero in
my eyes. He had actually talked to
Jungle George...and lived!
“When?” I asked.
“When what?”
“When did you talk to him?”
“Whenever. Last week. Whenever I want.”
“You mean you just go, ‘Hi George,’ and start talking to him?”
“Well, I don’t go over and knock on the door or anything. He doesn’t like being bothered, and Dad makes
sure I don’t. But if I’m around and see him out in the yard messing with his
plants, I’ll walk over to the fence and say hi, and if he talks to me he talks
to me and if he don’t, he don’t.”
My mouth was open as wide as an airplane hangar.
Steve chuckled. “Nothin’ to be scared of. He’s just a lonesome ol’ man.”
“Ever been inside?”
“Not the house. But he invited me into the yard once when he was in a
pretty good mood and started showing me every plant and bush and tree in there.
He can tell you the name of every one of them in Latin and German too.”
German! That was sinister in itself. World War II had only been over for a
decade and a half by then and our dads were vets. Germans were the enemy. The villains in every war movie,
storm-troopers, Jew-killers, the ones who had wounded or killed our fathers or
the fathers of people we knew. In fact, Steve’s dad had a scar on the front of
one shoulder and a bigger one in back at the top of the shoulder blade where a
German round had gone through. Mad German scientists had experimented on
prisoners. Couldn’t George be one of those?
This “logic” ignored the fact that George was very likely American of
German descent, the same as my own grandfather was. Perhaps a first-generation
American like Grandpa Vern was. But locally, the language and many of the
customs of the old country had been very intentionally lost. Other communities
had maintained those Germanic traditions. In nearby New Bremen and New Knoxville,
people of my grandfather’s generation still spoke “low German” among
themselves. But that wasn’t common in my town, where the people in those places
were referred to, in pejorative terms, as “ol’ Dutchmen” (because they spoke
Deutsch) and around here, my own grandfather had been brought up being warned
not to speak German so he “wouldn’t sound ignorant”. It was a “no dandelion”
community and you had to try and avoid being a stand-out weed, especially
within the context of the two world wars, in which Germany was a bitter foe.
“He just knows German, is all,” Steve laughed. “No crime in that.”
For the three years that we lived in that neighborhood, Steve continued
to be my best friend and protector, and Jungle George and his incredible yard
the object of my fascination. I had to work up my courage before, on Steve’s
coaxing, I could ride through the twilight of George’s tree-tunnel front
sidewalk when he was out in his yard and wave. But I eventually started doing
it any time he was out. Sometimes Jungle George gave a perfunctory wave back.
Other times he didn’t. But the important thing was that he was now human in my
mind—an interesting character, in fact. An eccentric with an incredible
environment that we should be glad to have as an integral part of the
neighborhood.
As I grew from childhood to pre-adolescence in those three years, there
were a lot of times that I wanted to be Steve. A kid whose dad taught him
amazing skills and actually talked to him. A little boy with a man’s sense of
responsibility and with the empathy and honesty of a gentleman. A small, wiry
tough kid who used his grit to defend not only himself but others. A guy who
seemed to know no fear.
I learned a lot from Steve and I learned to admire George. He was that
little boy who wanted waving grass and a yard gone rogue, and as a man he had
the individualism to make his wish come true. Ironically, in the last
twenty-five years or so, I’ve turned, not into Steve, but into Jungle George.
The neighbor who refuses to cut the grass and lets it wave in the wind, who
lives in a piece of the deep, dark forest that still invades what is becoming a
suburban neighborhood. The one who thinks dog-rose and Spanish broom are as
beautiful as any other flower and lets them run rampant. The curmudgeon who
rejected the installation of natural gas and kept on heating with firewood. The
rebel who acquired a buffer zone on the edge of the wilds and decided to remain
on the margin of the civilized life
around him, because that was always his dream.
2 comments:
Thank you. I just saw this today. It bought back memories of eating dandy lion greens and beet greens. My Grandmother actually grew them for the greens. They were not my favourite but I had to eat them because Grandma said so. I lived on Murray St. I think beside your Aunt and across the street from my grandparents. I now enjoy the greens in salads which are readily available in the stores. Thanks again.
Thanks so much for your "greens" memory "Anon". Actually, it was my great-grandmother, Maude Numbers, who lived on Murray at the corner of Hoopengarner.
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