As we saw yesterday from a simple commentary included in a
church bulletin from the 1940s, Father’s Day was seen and celebrated in a much
different manner than it is now. Oh, the concept of setting aside time to
celebrate the Dad in the family still remains a constant, but the sentiments
expressed—and the manner in which they were delivered—seem so much a part of a
different world.
And it was a different world. It was during
and just after World War II—an experience that shook both men and nations to
their foundations, with profound effects upon family structures as a whole.
Just the simple thought expressed in a card can illustrate
that. I discovered a Father’s Day card tucked away in the stash of papers saved
by Agnes Tully Stevens. It was a red-white-and-blue festooned note, with an
actual ribbon of those same colors woven into the card stock at the top of the
page. Though odd for a Father’s Day remembrance, it was, after all, delivered
to Will Stevens during the war—in fact, just after his son Frank’s month-long
leave from the Navy and just before he was assigned to the Pacific arena in
July, 1944. Two crossed flags underscore the words, “A Father’s Day Tribute.” My
father-in-law’s familiar inscription to his dad, “To the Auld Won,” seemed
jauntily out of place for both the military décor and the syrupy poetry to
which we’ve grown accustomed for such occasions, the only detour from the
proper ambience conjured for the occasion.
Deftly focusing on the recipient, the two stanzas enclosed
within the card focus not on things to be given, but the person himself. Despite
the materialism and all that we’ve accumulated over the years since that
wartime era, isn’t that really what the celebration is all about? May we honor—or
remember—the person and not just the
things that we choose to purchase to perpetuate his persona.
To you life is a magic cup
That overflows with zest,
And time again you share its gifts
That others may be blest.
Now let the cup be passed to you,
And others make the toast,
For you who make an art of life
Deserve the tribute most!
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