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Jamie Stiehm
Past and Present
10 May 2013
Cleveland Police or the Air Force: Which Failure Is Worse?

Two breaking stories — heartbreaking — of violence on girls and women tell us it walks around in … Read More.

3 May 2013
Chance Meetings: The World Comes Home

Hip workplaces, like Bloomberg and Yahoo, are all about promoting chance conversations to yield ideas. … Read More.

26 Apr 2013
The President -- Too Proud for Hand-to-hand Politics?

President Obama invited all 20 women senators to dine at the White House Tuesday and made the 17 Democrats … Read More.

Living for Letters and Trains

Comment

I live for letters and trains, the greatest connectors. Life would be a pale shadow of itself without them.

The typed letter on linen paper I have here is dated May 19, 2003, and comes from Cambridge, Mass. I lived in Baltimore at the time, a city desk reporter.

The name on the parchment letterhead is Anthony Lewis, the author and columnist for The New York Times, who just died days before his 86th birthday. The world is down one of our greatest champions for constitutional and social justice.

But I have a precious piece of paper, addressed to Ms. Stiehm, written with warmth, brio and a bit of rhyme: "I have read 'King George the Second' and enjoyed it a lot. You know your Shakespeare! And you know the present George (W. Bush) all too well. Would he were gone, resolved into a dew. Thank you for the nice inscription, too. It was good to meet you. (In his hand) Best wishes, Anthony Lewis."

This kind note meant the world to me. The date is significant — the nation had invaded Iraq. I had written a protest piece in the style of Shakespearean theater, which lent itself remarkably well to the tragic events of the Bush presidency. Suddenly, the Pulitzer Prize-winner and I were tight, seeing eye-to-eye.

If it were an email message, it wouldn't have the permanence or heft. I would not have saved it as carefully. I could not hold the letter in my hands as a palpable link between us, between generations. Nor could I see the care the great writer took in composing the words that graced me.

My cherished Lewis letter is the latest reason why the United States Postal Service absolutely must be defended and preserved against all marauders and Republicans in Congress. Like, now. They have not (yet) cut the Saturday mail delivery. Same rough political weather goes for Amtrak, another essential part of our collective life.

The postal service and our rail network are public goods under siege, threatened with a wrongheaded notion they should turn a profit like a business in the private sector.

That is utter nonsense. Each is essential to a fair, healthy, freely circulating society — and public transportation is key to environmental conservation. Hard to put a price on that.

Let me bring in brilliant Tony Judt, the late historian who was born in London and lived in New York: "Railways remain the necessary and natural accompaniment to the emergence of civil society. They are a collective project for individual benefit."

In his final 2010 book, "Ill Fares the Land," he points out the great railway stations of the 19th and 20th centuries are unsurpassed public spaces, grand, lofty and practical. Thank you, Tony.

Train travel between Washington and New York is an urbane pleasure, crossing the majestic Susquehanna River before seeing Philadelphia's Victorian rowhouses on the riverfront. Los Angeles, the last city to release its chokehold on the automobile, is now building a mass transit system to connect Santa Monica and other cities to downtown. The boy next door when I was growing up, Rob, is working hard on it.

We should envision Amtrak expanding its infrastructure reach to connect more farms, small towns and big cities over our vast spaces and grids. There used to be a Pullman formal dining service on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad's night train to Chicago, one that they still talk about. Trains have a certain je ne sais qoui. You could meet anyone.

Both the nation's post office and the railroads have been avenues of advancement for the black middle class, another consideration far from the minds of critics. The post office was mandated by the Constitution, in order to actually unite the states. Nobody could run a private post for the young democracy, but everyone depended upon having one. You could write to anyone, then and now.

Let me bring in a Jane Austen character, Jane Fairfax in the novel "Emma," who caught the spirit in 1816:

"The post office is a wonderful establishment! The regularity and despatch of it! If one thinks of all that it has to do ... it is really astonishing!"

Yes, Jane. Exactly so. The post brings all kinds of things and, once in a while, a gem that charms you forever. Thank you, Mr. Lewis.

To find out more about Jamie Stiehm, and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists, visit www.creators.com.

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Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment
Beautiful column, Jamie! Like you, I love the USPS and have a friendly relationship with the mail carriers here in suburban Philly. I also treasure the hand-written note that rarely arrives to my hand-painted mailbox. However, I mail postcards to many friends, including a 95-yo aunt in Cleveland, which makes her feel great. What an honor to receive Anthony Lewis's letter. I'll have to look up 'brio' and add it to my vocabulary list.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Ruth Deming
Thu Mar 28, 2013 12:42 PM
Ma'am; let the dead bury the dead... We have work to do, the work that man left unfinished, and if we stop for a tear there will be no end to it...
We are a nation in need... The flag is flying high, but people's hearts have fallen... Profits are soaring, but people's expecations for a better future lie in the gutter... We have sacrificed from day one to make a home for liberty, and a land of milk and huney; and the more we have sacrificed the more the rich demand... Human rights will always be a thorn in the side of those who live on exploitation of humanity...Hand off the shovel... Dry your eyes...
As societies die they look to their honored dead for guidance, and make a cult around the bones of their heroes... Implore as they may, the dead do not answer them, and they must make their way alone into their own great beyond, or live in the past with their dead...We cannot dare be as all civilizations once were...We cannot look to God or our great dead for leadership, but must on our own find our way...
Those glorious ideas that illuminated the past we must seize for our own without making a fetish of them... We must put aside the tyranny of ideas and put aside the tyranny of men...We must advance the cause of human rights and equality that makes democracy possible... We must not think as with a single mind, but with many minds try to resolve our dilemmas...
If we will renew this land and this people we must find again the dreams of youth, and capture again our own heroic nature... We must each of us find our morality, not to give morality the force of law, but to give each of us a measure of our own behavior, and by that standard live so we are fit for democracy... Those who cannot govern themselves can govern no one, and that people demoralized is offering itself to slavery...
We are better than that, and while we may wish to mourn, and want to remember we have time only for work and dreams, and out of our dreams must build a new America...
Ma'am;... The love of my life carries the post; but I write on the water... Why write for the ages when it is the moment I prize, and the moment I need... To touch a life is kindness, and to touch a mind is profound, and we need a whole lot of each to accomplish our goal...
Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #2
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Thu Mar 28, 2013 2:18 PM
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