The most influential economist of the 20th century, John Maynard Keynes, when asked if he could recall anything else like the Great Depression of the 1930s, said he certainly could: "It was called the Dark Ages, and it lasted four hundred years."
What Keynes referred to was the tempering of my father's generation. Part, anyway.
Dad remembered the Great Depression as a healthy time. "Nobody had a dime." But no one cared. You helped each other, he said. Faded laundry flapping on the line, a family goat, milk bottles clinking, the account at the grocery carried until you could pay.
Economies creaked to a standstill all over the globe. A young century ceased to be promising. William Manchester later wrote, reaching for the rear of the hall: "This was calamity howling on a cosmic scale...."
"And do you, Thomas Francis Scanlon Ahern...."
Scanlon? My father winced. The priest had to say that?
"...take this woman...." Hazel, his June bride, ready top and bottom for delivery into Dad's trembling hands.
He heard the predictable whispers skitter through the front pew where three of Hazel's sisters sat, mostly in judgment as the family was wont; three short women with exceptionally pale skin and practical hair. A well-dusted St. Joseph looked down from a pedestal. Frank Smith witnessed for the groom; honest and plain. Hazel's sister, Philomena, a busy mouse, was the maid of honor. Five Presbyterian sisters altogether, counting Hazel, female splinters from a thick plank of Scottish mother. Nervous enough in a Catholic church, with the Pope's finger pointing this way and that. Even though most of them had their own Catholic husbands and had accepted Catholic baptisms for their babies, relinquished — as the Church of Rome demanded in exchange for its blessing on a "mixed" union — to an upbringing in "the One True Faith." The One False Faith, the McKays would insist if cornered. What did the Church of Rome ever do for Scotland except get us killed?
So: Scanlon?
The sisters' pew calculated. Hazel knew the story but hadn't told.