“Thank you for coming today on this sad occasion for all of
us who knew our good friend. It falls to me to do the eulogy, after his beloved
wife and children asked me. How could I refuse? How do we mourn a life well
lived, particularly in the face of such profound tragedy? Across our town, so
many funerals are taking place today, and in the days yet to come. All of us
have been touched in one way or another. No survivor is left unaffected. All of
us know someone who has passed on.
And all because of food poisoning.
Life is a strange thing. One moment you’re driving along on
a leisurely afternoon’s drive in the countryside, the next you’re being plowed
from the side by a runaway truck. One moment you’re strolling on a winter day,
the next you’re slipping on ice and breaking your neck. One moment you’re
helping yourself to one of your patented epic sandwiches, the next you’re
choking.
We can remember our friend. We can remember the endlessly
hungry, endlessly napping, endlessly bowling playing pal with the strange name
and the curious hair. We can remember our beloved Dag. We can remember Dagwood
Bumstead.
Dagwood seemed to have been around forever, didn’t he?
Working away during the days as an office manager- when he wasn’t napping and
getting chewed out by his boss, of course. Making those impossibly tall
sandwiches that were practically a work of art. Working on naps on the couch.
Spending time with his wife Blondie, their kids Alexander and Cookie, and their
dog Daisy. There, there, Daisy, Dag’s in a better place now.
And he touched so many lives along the way. You know, Dag
and I were best friends. Our wives were best friends. We lived next door to
each other for years on end. Dag and I went bowling together, car pooled
together. I borrowed tools from him all the time. We’d tease and heckle each
other to no end, because hey, that’s what friends do, right? He’d tell me about
his bad day with that old crank of a boss of his… oh, hi, Mr. Dithers! How are
you today? I’m surprised you’re not up here complaining about how you have to
find a replacement for Dag now that he’s dead.
Where was I? Oh yes. Dag.
How do we make sense of a death so tragic, a death so young?
Especially of a stand up decent guy like him? Especially among so much more
death? Maybe all we can do is talk about what happened. How it all came to be.
Maybe he wasn’t the first link in the daisy chain, as they
say. Maybe he was the second. Maybe it started with that blind old man who got
in his car two miles away. But for Dag, it started at home. In the kitchen.
Where he was making one of his infamous Dagwood sandwiches. You know, I always
used to wonder why Dag didn’t gain any weight considering the feasts he’d call
a snack. Did he have an eating disorder?
I’m getting off track. What I’m trying to say here is
simple. Or maybe not. Anyway, Dag was making that sandwich, happy as he could
be, piling on meats and cheeses and artisan breads and all the condiments, no
doubt thinking of how happy he’d be eating all that.
What he didn’t know was that instead of his usual pepper
paste, someone at the factory had bottled a jar of Carolina Reaper pepper paste
and mislabeled it. What you might not know is that Carolina Reaper is
considered the world’s hottest pepper. What Dag didn’t know was that Carolina
Reaper was the only thing in the world he was allergic to. So there’s Dag, finishing
up making his big Dagwood sandwich, and he starts eating…
And then it happened.
Alexander said he was clutching his throat and turning blue.
The doctors later said he was having an allergic reaction. He ran out the front
door… and instead of running into the mailman as he so often did when he ran out the door, he ran into that kid Elmo from the neighbourhood. Since Elmo’s
parents aren’t here today, I can feel safe in telling all of you that I never
liked that kid.
Anyway, Dag ran into Elmo, knocking him into the street. It was at that very moment that the aforementioned old blind guy, Mr. Magoo, driving
his car without a license, was coming. Dag collapsed on the sidewalk. Elmo got
run over by Mr. Magoo, who never saw the kid. Magoo’s car spun out of control
in a seventeen block careening route of carnage and disaster, knocking down
pedestrians on the sidewalks, ramming into other cars, and finally hitting a
propane truck.
The propane truck blew up. Biggest explosion this town has
ever seen. Destroyed most of the hospital.
So there was Dag dying of an allergic reaction. What was left of
Elmo pancaked in the street. Mr. Magoo burnt to a crisp inside what’s left of
his car.
And it didn’t stop there.
The Warbucks mansion was destroyed. Oliver and Annie
Warbucks were among the casualties.
A family of six visiting relatives here in town, all wiped
out. Bil, Thelma, and their children Billy, Dolly, Jeffy, and P.J.. The weird
thing is the relatives say it seems those kids never seemed to get any older.
Well, now they won’t.
You’ve all heard about the Flagstons and the Thurstons. Hi, Lois,
their children, all wiped out when one of the hospital boilers came crashing
down on their home. And to add insult to injury, the boiler blasted apart right
after crashing- and totaled the home of the Thurstons. Irma and Thirsty were…
well, their funerals are going to have to be closed caskets. Severed in half by flying debris? You don't want to see that.
Camp Swampy was destroyed. Nearly every soldier and officer
there killed when the second hospital boiler landed there and set everything
ablaze. Except for Private Bailey, who was off in the woods napping.
The Duncan family have survived, fortunately. Jeremy’s van
didn’t, and apparently the boy is heartbroken, because his guitar was inside.
Walt, is it true that Jeremy wants to hold a funeral for his guitar?
There were rumours of talking cows, cavemen, mad scientists,
and little geeky kids all running together away from the Larson Institute For Far Side
Surrealism before the building collapsed. Given how reclusive the inhabitants
of that building were, we still don’t know how the survivors are coping.
You know, if anyone
would have been the cause of four hundred fifty eight people in this town
meeting a horrible end, I would have thought it would have been that brat Calvin. You know, the kid who walks
around with that stuffed tiger and seems to talk to himself a lot. The worst
kid I’ve ever met. But no, he was off with his parents that day on some ‘character
building’ camping trip and missed the whole thing.
That’s beside the point. What is the point is that our
friend is dead. With four hundred fifty seven other people in town.
All because of a mislabeled jar of pepper paste.
Or a blind old man who should have been in a nursing home
forty years ago.
Take your pick.
Well, goodbye, Dag.
You were the best friend anyone could have asked for.
We’ll all miss you. Even Old Man Dithers, who’ll have to
start yelling at other people.
Oh, don’t look at me that way, J.C., we both know you’re
going to miss the Dagster.
And for the record… I’ll get around to returning that power
drill I borrowed, Dag. Sometime next week.”
I haven't seen a Dagwood cartoon in ages! Miss Calvin & Hobbes quite a lot though :)
ReplyDeleteA couple of the papers still carry that one.
DeleteI loved Mr. Magoo.
ReplyDeleteI figured I could get away with working an animated character into a comic strip universe.
DeleteDagwood's dead?
ReplyDeleteHe is now!
DeleteBlonde and Dagwood will go on forever. Blonde first started in 1930. Dagwood didn't appear until a few years later. It is still running daily in the comic section of the LA Times and, I'm sure, other newspapers.
ReplyDeleteYes, we've got it in a couple of our papers.
DeleteI had food poisoning once. I could swear I got it from a Big Mac at a McDonald's on North Michigan Avenue in Chicago in 1988. I thought I was going to die, and at some points I wished I actually would.
ReplyDeleteI had a bad reaction to some Chinese food once.
DeleteThis sounds like Chicago... on a good day.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the laughs!
You're welcome!
Delete