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Remember Index] |
In Lopez, when
snow was snow
Roger K. Miller
was a newspaperman for many years and now spends his
Christmases in Wisconsin.
This is how it was in those December days in the tiny,
improbably named village of Lopez in the mountains of
northeastern Pennsylvania in those long-ago decades few of us
can now recall. We don't remember whether it usually snowed
six inches before 12 a.m. or 12 inches before 6 a.m., but
always, always it snowed.
For us - my
cousins and me and our mothers and fathers and our aunts and
uncles - that old poem, "Over the river and through the woods
to grandmother's house," was literally true. Come Christmas we
all bundled into, not sleighs, but cars and headed south from
various points in upstate New York to the ancestral homestead
in Lopez, which then did not bill itself as the "Icebox of
Pennsylvania" as it does now, but had even more right to.
We can't recall those days with accuracy, but most of us
remember the snow. It snowed, hard, a northern Pennsylvania
rural snowfall. We were part of the last generation to know
innocent snowstorms, when they were acts of nature to be
appreciated and endured, not problems to be salted and
shoveled on the orders of election-conscious politicians.
Yes, it snowed, storms of heroic proportions, storms to make
wolves howl and bury their noses into their tails. Whirling
thicknesses of snow that obscured the majestic evergreens just
outside the house but heightened the colors inside: the
brindled, scarred furniture, the fake mahogany of the
cupboards and bookcases, the begrimed reds and blues of the
book covers.
We could tell that the snow would continue falling for hours,
and we were glad. It added to the warmth and security created
by the well-stoked wood stoves that were the aging and drafty
house's only source of heat.
The window panes frosted over. In that climate, that leaky old
dwelling, they frosted over at Thanksgiving and stayed frosted
over until March. Just as the stove radiated heat, so the
windows radiated cold, and if we stood within a couple inches
of them, our noses would frost over, too.
The windows enhanced the opacity of the world outside. The
snow whirled, buffeted, climbed upon and doubled within
itself. The house shook. We could imagine that the snow blew
not only around and over the house, but underneath it, as if
the house were suspended with all of us inside.
The few souls who braved the elements looked like mariners who
reeled across the field with a drunken seaman's gait. They
struggled up the hillside, their steps leaving wakes of snow.
An occasional car chugged and lurched like a tugboat down the
unplowed road.
Over it all hung a washed-out, benday sky.
Soon the sun set, and we gathered in and near the living room,
perhaps to watch our one television channel, whose weak signal
brought us snow to match that whipping around outside. Perhaps
to listen to Christmas programs on the radio, still a viable
alternative long before viable alternative became a hackneyed
phrase. Perhaps to haul out the electric train set, added to
each year, and set it up around the Christmas tree.
Or perhaps just to talk, or listen to grown-ups talk, and try
to figure out what was meant by what was being said - or not
being said.
And then, still later, to bed, up the creaking stairs, with
the night dark and the wind whistling and the unseen snow
still falling. To listen, in the intervals of silence, to the
night that had the power - which we had given it - to be the
most magical night of the year.
by Roger K. Miller
rkmiller@ticon.net
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