I can’t imagine anything worse than having to deliver a eulogy, but recently, it happened to me. Now, I hate funerals, and will do nearly anything to get out of going to one. Unfortunately, this family was under the mistaken impression that I was a close friend of the deceased, and what do you say when a teary-eyed daughter drops in and practically begs you to say a few words? I am not strong enough of heart or honest enough in spirit to refuse such a request based on the fact that I detested the bastard with every fiber of my being. So, wimp that I am, I reluctantly agreed.
After she left, I set
about, pen in hand and a clean ream of white bond at my elbow, to write
something that accentuated the meager good points about this fellow. I
wracked my brain. Hours passed. Ashtrays grew full.
Wastebaskets overflowed with hundreds of false starts.
The funeral was the next
afternoon and, at 2:00 AM, I still had nothing. Finally, I just gave up,
decided to wing it, and went to bed.
The day of the funeral
was, well, funereal. They sky was dark enough to make even an atheist
believe in the Apocalypse. Inside the funeral parlor, the organ music
rose and fell like a queasy stomach as I made my way to the lectern, still
having no idea what to say.
I gazed out at a sea of
puddly eyes, cleared my throat, and began.
“We are here today to bid
farewell to Fred--a man who was a darned good driver. He never drank
when he was behind the wheel, and the fact that he only had one arm had nothing
to do with it.
“I think the most
impressive thing about Fred was how great he looked in sunglasses and those
stylish tropical print Bermuda shorts he used to wear. You have to be a
special person to wear shorts like that with knee socks, wing tips, and an “I’m
with Stupid” sweatshirt. Not everyone can pull off that look, but on
Fred, it was perfection.
“You could always depend
on Fred for a good word--and every now and then, a complete sentence. He
went out of his way to help little children, and, to this day, I think the
charges filed by their parents were trumped up.
“And that suspicious
disappearance of pets in his neighborhood had absolutely nothing to do with his
taxidermy hobby--I’m positive of that. Anyone who says otherwise is a
liar! The white slavery ring was pure nonsense, too. Fred never
discriminated on the basis of color. If you could do the job, you were OK
with Fred.
“Fred was constantly
getting blamed for things he had nothing to do with, and I am outraged that he
had to deal with that all his life. The fact that Fred bought a new Rolls
Royce the day after the bank was robbed was pure coincidence. If one is
thrifty, one can certainly save enough for a car like that on a janitor’s
salary. And I heard that he won that trip to Switzerland. The
public is too quick to judge these things, and law enforcement too quick to
make arrests.
“And let’s not
forget all the community service that Fred has performed. True, it was part
of the sentencing, but community service is community service, and should be
recognized and applauded.
“But now, Fred has laid
his burden down. His troubles are over, as are those of the entire
town. Fred’s death has not been in vain. People can now remove the
bars from their windows. Merchants can holster their handguns.
Children can play outside again--and all because we are here today.
The entire community owes Fred a great debt of gratitude.
“Thank you.”
So funny. I thought I had a demented mind, but you have me beat.
ReplyDeleteProbably because I'm older than you are--I've been at it longer. ;-)
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