Once Again-The Summer Of
Love, 1967-Postcards From A Lost Planet
By Jeffrey Thorne
The Scribe said it best
one night, one Summer of Love, 1967 night, one cold San Francisco night, a
summer night when the Japan currents went awry and reminded one of old Mark
Twain’s witty sayings about the coldest winter he had ever spent-August in the
city of sweet brethren Saint Francis, when he declared (so like that mad man to
use the seventh person imperative, to declare in his world-historic way, for
such small letter asterisk events), that the breeze coming through the land
would shake society to its foundations. Would make nine to five work-a-day world
a bore (and give his poor brethren a chance to partake of the golden age that he,
his parents, his Acre neighborhood, and most of the known world had been
short-changed of for millennia), make that long suburban tract complete with
dishwasher and sanitary garbage disposal obsolete before the last mortgage
payment hit the dirt (get people to think differently about space, about
community, and give that same and give that poor brethren a chance to partake
of the golden age of living space that he, his parents, his Acre neighborhood,
and most of the known world had been short-changed of for millennia), would
make those three point two kids and that one dog a victim of old-fashioned
thinking (well, okay).
Said, get this for a guy
who became a non-believer, a non-believer in risen Christ if you can believe
that very early in his teens (and went to church, sliding side door church just
to sit a few rows behind some lovely he was pining over just to watch her ass
so yes a non-believer) that the new dispensation was at hand-if we could keep
it, keep the bastards, and you know who the bastards were then-the night-takers
and guys who conned you into nine to five dreams, suburban flats and, what was
it three point two kids (we will pass on the not mandatory dog) from barking at
the door.
Sure the Scribe talked
the talk and walked the walk, oh boy did he, spouting forth about one love,
about the new garden of eden (small case is right remember he was a non-believer,
maybe had always been something of an outlaw even when he cruised the books for
a sign), about that turning the world upside down and making it stick (hell, he
was always a closet Digger check that out sometime if you delve back into the
17th century English revolution).
That was the rub, that
was the factor that got away from the Scribe as much as he knew that we were on
tender mercies ground, knew that that little counter attack from out of the
blue would come when we thought the world had stopped turning on itself and had
gone upside down that eventually would do in even the Scribe. Would turn his
mouth to ashes, would turn a sainted brethren (not many out in Frisco in those
days knew his given name was Francis at a time when everybody was “reinventing”
themselves including clustering up new monikers to get washed clean, also a
Scribe expression and so only knew the moniker) down the gutter road, float him
out to the Japan seas long before he ever heard the Duke blast that high white
note. Yeah, blast the times, blast the whole fucking world for taking down a
brethren as pure as snow.
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