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Delta Blues

Snert

FRIEND
Raleigh, NC
Subject: FW: Delta Blues





Some of you may know of Garrison Keillor's radio shows and writings.



>>

> > By Garrison Keillor

>

> > Tribune Media Services

> >

> >

> >

> > I flew to New York on the day spring arrived and all along 90th Street

> > a lovely

> > blue flower called Pushkinia blossomed which is named for the poet

> who,

> > according to Russians, cannot be translated into English, but

> > Tchaikovsky made

> > a gorgeous opera of 'Eugene Onegin,' which is some consolation, and

> > then there is the flower.

> I flew on Northwest Airlines, which now, like Pushkin, will vanish into

> > the

> > earth, devoured by Delta, and this makes me a little sad. Not sad

> > enough to

> > write an opera but enough to write a column. The company used to be

> > called

> > Northwest Orient and was founded in Minneapolis

> > in 1926 to carry mail to Chicago.

> > I used to live in a house in St. Paul

> > once owned by Croil Hunter, a president of Northwest Orient, who, when

> > Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt was stranded at the airport by a blizzard, put

> her

> > up in the

> > guest room of his house.

> >

> The company grew after the war and launched the Minneapolis-New York

> > route in 1945 and two years later started flying

> > to Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai and Manila.

> > Back in my youth, Dad sometimes took

> > us to the airport to watch planes take off and land, such as the

> Boeing

> > Stratocruiser, a double-decker equipped with

> > passenger lounges. There still were farms out by the airport then, and

> > in the

> > majestic Northwest Orient radio jingle I grew up hearing, a Chinese

> > gong went

> > whanngngngngn after the word 'Orient' and you imagined lifting up

> > from cornfields and flying away to the West until you got to the East.

> Our family did not fly, we drove, and Spokane

> > was as far west as we went, where Uncle Lawrence and Aunt Bessie

> lived,

> > and so Northwest Orient was not a

> > carrier to me, it was a romantic concept. We middle children are

> filled

> > with

> > restless longing, trapped as we are between the Sacred First-Born

> > Miracle Child and the Darling Infants. I grew

> > up with middleness, a B-minus

> > student in the middle of the country, and I longed to get out of the

> > Midwest and fly away to the edge of the world, and I knew

> > that Northwest Orient would take me there.

> (When I say Northwest, I am talking about a childhood romance, not a

> > corporation as such. The company was founded by romantics, men who

> loved

> > aviation, and in 1989 it fell into the hands of rapacious bandits who

> > ate its

> > heart and plunged it headlong into debt and could be as cruel to

> > employees as

> > any other big uni on-busting corporation. But

> > we cling to childhood illusions.)

> We are good travelers, we middle Americans, and when Northwest opened a

> > route

> > to Beijing, everybody and their

> > cousin talked about going there, and this spring the direct

> > Minneapolis-Paris

> > route opened, a beautiful idea to us as we scrape the ice off our

> > windshields.

> > We don't actually go, of course - we go to work - but we could go on

> > any given

> > day, could write 'Au Revoir, Ma Famille' on a paper towel and leave

> > it on the kitchen table under a salt shaker and drive to the airport

> on

> > the

> > bank of the Minnesota River, abandon the car in a snowbank, flash the

> > plastic,

> > board the plane, and wake up in Paris, like Lindbergh.

> I did not fly in an airplane until I was 28 years old and that was a

> > late-night

> > Northwest flight on a 747 to New York.

> > I sat back in the 30th row, surrounded by empty seats, my nose to the

> > window,

> > a nd when we came down through the clouds to the great city spread

> like a

> > blanket of glittering stars and into Kennedy Airport, I felt as if I'd

> > been

> > given a great prize.

> And so I mourn the loss of my childhood airline and the silver planes

> > with red

> > tails that rose from the corn. What is a Delta? A delta is mud

> > deposited by the

> > river. Also the fourth letter of the Greek alphabet.. Also a sort of

> > triangular

> > shape. But to me it is mud which

> > forms a rich bottomland where they grow cotton and late at night old

> > black men

> > sit in a juke joint and play an old beat-up guitar and sing: 'I wanted

> > to go to the Orient someday. Get on a silver plane marked NWA. But

> that

> > plane that would take me, it done flew

> > away. I heard it on the morning news. They're wiping out the Ns and

> Ws.

> > That's

> > why I got these Delta blues.'

> >

> >

> >

> > (Garrison Keillor's 'A Prairie Home Companion' can be heard Saturday

> > nights on public radio stations across the country.)
 
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