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Village Squire, 1974-12, Page 9There seemed to be many of these around when I was a boy. Every child appeared to have at least one. The reason was that they were more visible. They were not conveniently housed as now in ' large institutions where they can be 'by themselves' and have 'friends their own age'. (One could add but doesn't 'and mind their own business') There are those also who live in spanking new senior citizen apartments grouped together in beautifully landscaped surroundings. They too can be 'by themselves'. The word ghetto comes to mind but it is surely ungracious to use it. The world does progress, painfully, and times do get better, and the old are not allowed to suffer; but we must be left the privilege of complaining. Nothing of course is ever perfect. When the Angel Gabriel sounds his horn there will likely be criticism of his musical ability. Even Heaven may be not quite as advertised; it would be that we will have to do some adjusting and make some compromises to be happy there. At the time of which I write a grandparent could be recognized at a glance. The males wore chin whiskers; the females had the hair drawn into a tight bun at the back of the head, and parted chastely in front. Both sexes tended to dark clothes and severity of style. There was no nonsense about tinting hair or using rouge or even cold cream. That would be 'flying in the face of Providence'. Providence was an aspect of the Deity more approachable than some. Once could use the term with less danger of sacrilege. One didn't tempt Providence by any loose or careless talk. It was never doubt"d that there was One 'up there, or out there, greatly concerned about the morals of the human race and ready to call one to account for even a wicked rthought or word of disrespect. Perhaps on this account the moral aspect of this society was very tidy on the surface. Sin was not abolished; It was driven underground and like a guerrilla movement became more dangerous. It infiltrated and festered. It was camouflaged by hypocrisy, bigotry, and self-righteousness and finally broke out in two of the most vicious wars ever to beset humanity. It is a bit trite to say that sin is still with us. Those that plagued past generations are not to the fore but there are lots of others more pleasing and plausible to take their places. I suppose my own grandparents conformed more or less to the general ideas of the age but in my contacts with them I did not get this impression. I had at first a complete set of four, but both grandmothers must have died in their sixties. I remember little about them. People died younger then. They just got to 'feeling poorly' and pretty soon they were gone. There was no long seige of hospital and wheel chair. At least one doesn't recall it that way. I had two very good grandfathers whom I employed at different periods: Grandfather L., Dad's father, from infant days until I was twelve, and Grandfather C. of the distaff side from age fifteen to twenty-five. There is a space in here when there was no 'Grandfather in Residence', so to speak. It should have been Grandpa C., who though he must have been aware of me sort of looked the other way. When I was about fifteen he seemed to Robert Laidlaw relects on grandparents, his and others decide that I might be worth some attention, and he began to cultivate an acquaintance. He was a witty, charming man. We quickly became friends and this friendship endured until his death. Grandfather C. liked children well enough. He gave them candy and spoke jovially, he was indulgent and never cranky, but he just didn't see children as people. Not until they acquired some common sense did he really become aware of them. Much different was Grandfather L. I didn't become acquainted with him, he was just there from earliest memory. He was friendship, understanding, security. I suppose I loved him, but one wasn't conscious of this feeling. When he died I wasn't upset. With the unconscious selfish- ness of a child I had accepted him as my right, something that was there when I needed it. Now he was gone and other things and people would take his place. But I didn't forget him and never will. As I remember him he was a frail white-haired old man with a long white beard, thin longish hair and a pale skin. Too pale, because he was anaemic. He took Vita -Ore, a much -advertised patent medicine. It must have helped because he lived into this eighties. It was hard to visualize this man as the rugged pioneer who pushed the bush to the back of our pleasant fertile farm, who put up the modern (for that time) buildings and who drained and tilled the land until it was tamed. This was all in a period of fifty years. We think of today as the time of greatest change, and so it is, for the world; but for Western Ontario it was the years from 1860 to 1910. This was the turning of the solid wilderness into a civilized land. Our Old farm even today is not all that different from what it was in my boyhood. The people who did this were ordinary enough. They were Scotch, Irish, and English in about equal proportions. This was a larger proportion of the first two compared to the population of Great Britain. The Canadian of Western Ontario, that is, the people who lived there up to World War One, were different from the average Briton. The alloy was altered. These people were tough and hardy, very willing to work, also inclined to be stubborn, and bigoted and uncompromising as to religion. In theory, Catholic and Protestant hated each other. In practise, they worked side by side. If a neighbour needed help his religion didn't matter. They were drawn together and held together by the strange alchemy of the pioneer spirit. The bush must be conquered, and to do that they must cling to each other. Looking back, I can see that the Scotch VILLAGE SQUIRE/NOVEMBER 1974, 7 7