No Hurry

Scout and Atticus

Maycomb was a tired old town, even in 1932 when I first knew it. Somehow, it was hotter then. Men’s stiff collars wilted by nine in the morning; ladies bathed before noon, after their 3 o’clock naps, and by nightfall were like soft teacakes with frosting from sweating and sweet talcum. The day was twenty-four hours long, but it seemed longer. There was no hurry, for there was nowhere to go and nothing to buy… and no money to buy it with.
Harper Lee (Scout narrating at the beginning of To Kill A Mockingbird)

After several days of upper 90’s temperatures, I have greater understanding for the slower moving pace of the south and other warm environs.  There is not much that can be easily accomplished in humid heat other than staying in the shade and sweating.  Cats sprawl like furry puddles on the ground.   Dogs drip with their panting.  Horses have sweat marks under their manes.   And people are soft teacakes with frosting.

Those unfortunate places where the temperatures don’t drop much at night must really slow down to a crawl as attempting to sleep in a puddle of perspiration is just like constant menopause.

So we get a taste of it just to remind us what so much of the world lives with all the time, with air conditioning still being rare almost everywhere except the most fortunate affluent folk.  We are meant to slow down in the summer, stop hurrying, just melt and bathe and nap and simply be.

We usually complain about how fast time passes.  Summer is surely the necessary remedy.

 
"What dreadful hot weather we have! It keeps me in a continual state of inelegance." 
--Jane Austen

One thought on “No Hurry

  1. Yessum, hot summers are intricate in the culture of the South, especially, and had a lot to do with it’s architecture. High ceilings kept the warm air in a room over the heads of the occupants, long wide porches shaded the windows, and building the floors higher off the ground provided circulation that helped cool down the overall structure. Sure, those houses were really hard to heat in the winter, mostly using fireplaces (often one in each room, with back-to-back fireplaces in adjacent rooms sharing one chimney), but folks could put on more clothes and, hey, there was plenty of firewood for the cutting, even up into my young adulthood. But really cold winters were brief, with “thaws” popping up along when an extra sweater in the house could be taken off, but hot weather dominated — I’ve seen it hot in March and even too warm in November to kill hogs, as the meat not being smoked would not stay cool enough to avoid spoilage. Mr. Carrier’s invention of the air conditioner enabled the growth of many economic aspects of the South — folks can tolerate a heat index of 114 if they can get a good night’s sleep at 78 degrees, which is assured only by an air conditioner. I think every town in the South should have a statue to him or at least a street named in his honor.

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