Fire balloons.
You rarely see them these days, though in some countries, I
hear, they are still filled with warm breath from a small straw fire hung
beneath. But in 1925 Illinois, we still had them, and one of the last memories
I have of my grandfather is the last hour of a Fourth of July night forty-eight
years ago when Grandpa and I walked out on the lawn and lit a small fire and
filled the pear-shaped red-white-and-blue-striped paper balloon with hot air,
and held the flickering bright-angel presence in our hands a final moment in
front of a porch lined with uncles and aunts and cousins and mothers and
fathers, and then, very softly, let the thing that was life and light and
mystery go out of our fingers up on the summer night air and away over the
beginning-to-sleep houses, among the stars, as fragile, as wondrous, as
vulnerable, as lovely as life itself.
I see my grandfather there looking up at that strange
drifting light, thinking his own still thoughts. I see me, my eyes filled with
tears, because it was all over, the night was done, I knew there would never be
another night like this.
No one said anything. We all just looked up at the sky and
we breathed out and in and we all thought the same things, but nobody said.
Someone finally had to say, though, didn’t they? And that one is me.
The wine still waits in the cellars below.
My beloved family still sits on the porch in the dark.
The fire balloon still drifts and burns in the night sky of
an as yet unburied summer.
Why and how? Because I say it is so.
Ray Bradbury, from "Just This Side of Byzantium," the introduction to Dandelion Wine
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