THE SQUARE
There is in Wilmington a
public square, much the same as those in other towns of America,
except that our square is
sunken a trifle and one needs to descend a few granite steps to
reach it. Feeling at home
about it are the library, the post office, courthouse , town hall
and a large office
building. The equestrian statue sits at the top of a flight of
steps, also
of granite. The man
appears to be somewhat inferior to the mount, however, long ago,
he rode past here on the Kings Highway to cast Delawares vote
for the Revolt of '75. There
are two fountains, elm
trees, concrete walks, benches and for sure the sky. Once
or
twice a year there is a
band concert here. Election years it is almost always full of
politicians.
The park or square,
whichever, is apart from the town, like an island, somewhat
unimportant. In fact the people who frequent it are sometimes
called islanders'. Maybe
this makes it some
different of other town squares.
The square perhaps has
many dusty memories for many people, like the shadows of
sundowns and sun ups, or
like a book from the library being carried across it's grass.
We don't go to the square,
we only cross it to go from the post office to the library.
Even then, here is no one
you know at the benches. Most are men wearing dark blue
suits and black shoes,
reading a newspaper or sitting on one. They gather, talk, some
need canes, and stay for a long period, like morning to
afternoon. In cooler months you see these men in heavy overcoats,
slick and shining with age and most are gray, just like the person
in them. Once in awhile there is seen a Negro, alone and silent,
lonesome, seeking some sun.
The other day, I sat in
the square for the first time, killing twenty minutes and smoking a
cigarette. I sat looking
at the library, nodded at several I knew who nodded back. The
men in the dark blue suits
and black shoes paid no attention to me. The only way out is up
the stairs under the shadow
of the rider to the noisy street of life.
Abstract: January 1941
'The New Delawarean' magazine of Berthold Bothe.
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