A
Disgusting Thing
It's
a disgusting thing but Paddy Gilhooley, who knew better as a
child, had begun farting in church very early in life. He started in
grammar school, many decades ago, long before the nuns selected him in fourth
grade to be an altar boy to serve Mass.
The
Mass was then said in Latin with the altar boys' responses also said in Latin.
The nuns picked Paddy because he was tall and was able to memorize things
rapidly. By training him in fourth grade, the nuns believed Paddy would be able
to serve Mass for the next four years till he graduated from grammar
school.
Paddy
was less than thrilled to be singled out for this honor. He had nothing against
God or the Mass but he knew that fourth-grade altar boys were always assigned
to serve the Mass at 6:30 a.m., way too early in the day for Paddy.
Being
selected to be an altar boy, however, helped Paddy's grades even if more than
once the nuns had to summon his father to the school about some aspect of his
behavior that did not live up to the code at St. Nicholas of Tolentine
School.
St.
Nick's was a fine school whose mission was to educate the children of
immigrants whose fathers had jobs good enough to buy small bungalows in the
neighborhood known as Chicago Lawn. This was back in the 1940s when food was
cheap, houses were cheap and salaries were commensurately low.
Most
of the immigrants were from European countries--Germany, Poland, Lithuania,
Italy and Ireland. Parents were interested in their children getting an
education good enough for them to pass the entrance exam at one of the
parochial high schools in Chicago. These high schools were renowned for
offering college preparatory curricula. Tuition was around $250 a year. That
was a big sum in those days but Paddy Gilhooley's father, an electrician, and a
non-drinking Irishman, had already saved the $1,000 required for Paddy's four
years of high school. Now Mr. Gilhooley was saving to send Paddy to
college.
Paddy's
father wanted the best for his son. Once he had enough money put aside for
Paddy's college education, he planned to save more money to put him through law
school. Mr. Gilhooley didn't emigrate from Ireland to have his son work with
his hands. No sir, his son would go to law school and work with his mind. That
much was settled.
Paddy,
however, was a bit of a scamp when no one was looking. He discovered early on,
for example, that one way to square the score with the nuns who required good
behavior at all times was to fart in church, preferably in serial fashion, one
missile after another, silent but, as his classmates aways said, deadly.
He
started doing this in first grade when he had to sit with his classmates in one
of the first three rows in church. These were the pews reserved for the
first-graders at the Children's Mass. Right behind the first graders were
three rows of second graders. And behind them, three rows of third graders--and
so on. The procession continued, three rows at a time, all the way back to the
eighth graders who occupied their own three rows in the rear.
The
eighth graders were monitored carefully by the nuns. One false move and any
miscreant child would be led by the ear out into the foyer of the church, where
he--and it was always a boy--was dealt with summarily by the principal, usually
the toughest nun in the convent at the time and always an immigrant from
Ireland. In fact, the whole convent consisted of 16 nuns imported from Ireland
to deal with these children of immigrants who were not, by any means, a refined
group. Quite the contrary.
Paddy
realized the nuns were only doing their job--trying to maintain order in God's
House. But he enjoyed getting involved in devilment and looked forward to being
in eighth grade when he'd be able to sit in the rear of the church where the
nuns kept a close eye on boys like Paddy, most of them feisty to a fault, ready
to do anything at times to create a little commotion.
In
first grade Wally learned early on that farting in church was especially
troublesome to his classmates, especially the girls who seldom if ever
misbehaved. It took awhile for the nuns to identify which child was
stinking up the first three pews at the Children's Mass. But when several
little girls sitting behind Paddy began pointing at him, the jig, so to speak,
was up. Sister Mary Lorraine led Paddy down the aisle by the ear and placed him
in the custody of the principal, Sister Marie Patrick, a stout bullet of a
woman who did not suffer misbehavior happily.
"Why
did you do that, Paddy, at Mass, especially? Surely, you must know better. Your
parents will not be happy when I tell them."
Paddy,
though only seven years old, had learned to keep a straight face and deny
anything he was accused of. But it didn't help that despite great efforts by
his mother, there was no way to comb his hair since it featured seven
cowlicks--the barber had counted them for his curious mother. She had tried
gobs of the most popular hair tonic of the day, Wildroot Creme Oil, but the cowlicks
always popped up, often in the middle of Mass and just about the time Paddy
would let the first of several farts fly.
"Sister,
I didn't do nothin' at all," Paddy finally said. "I think it must
have been Stanley. He eats Polish sausage and sauerkraut. Ask him."
But
Sister Marie Patrick knew better so she led Paddy into the little office in the
back of the church until Mass was over. Then she waited by the doorway to see
Paddy's parents after Mass so she could discuss the problem with them. She really
didn't know what to say to them but she figured it out by the time Mass was
over.
Upon
hearing of the charge against Paddy, Mr. Gilhooley, in his best suit and tie,
was outraged. How could anyone, especially a nun from Ireland, say a thing like
that about Paddy, who was going to law school in a few years.
Paddy
himself, standing off to the side and watching the proceedings, enjoyed
everything immensely but kept a stoic face. Even at this age, with his spectacles
always slightly askew, he looked a little like a very young James Joyce or
maybe George Bernard Shaw.
He
never smiled or laughed when he was in the vicinity of people of authority,
especially his father or the nuns. His mother had seen him smile several times
and had told his father that Paddy was not as serious a child as his father
thought a lawyer-to-be should be.
Finally,
however, Sr. Marie Patrick, after mentioning to Mr. Gilhooley that she was from
the same county in Ireland that he was, convinced him that indeed Paddy had
been stinking up the front of the church during Mass.
"Where
did he learn such behavior," Sister asked Mr. Gilhooley, who said he had
no idea and looked at Mrs. Gilhooley, who knew full well that young Paddy had
grown up in a home where his father not only farted with bravado but also used
to sing, after each fart, an old ditty that was famous in the neighborhood:
"Beans,
beans, the musical fruit. The more you eat, the more you toot."
Mr.
Gilhooley was especially apt to fart and sing on Saturday afternoons while
listening to the radio as Notre Dame stomped on some lesser foe in a football
game. The more points Notre Dame would score, the more Mr. Gihooley would fart
and sing.
And
when Paddy's mother would complain that her husband was setting a bad example
for Paddy, Mr. Gilhooley would explain once again how many farting matches he
had won as a young man in Ireland. As the story would have it, Mr.
Gilhooley would show up at the pub for the matches held late on a Saturday
night. His presence was frowned upon because he didn't drink anything stronger
than ginger ale.
Finally,
Mr. Gilhooley decided to agree with Sr. Marie Patrick that young Paddy was
guilty of what might not be a mortal sin but certainly qualified as a venial
sin at the very least. He was also afraid his wife, an innocent woman if ever
there was one, might pipe up and say Paddy had learned to fart from his father
while they listened to Notre Dame games on the big console radio in the living
room.
"Sister,
I tell you this," Mr. Gihooley said. "If Paddy ever farts in church
again, you smack him with that ruler of yours right across his keister and
don't stop till the little bugger starts crying. Then you call me about it and
when he gets home, I'll wallop him again. You and I will put a stop to this
once and for all. Paddy is going to be a lawyer and no Irish lawyer farts in
church."
Sr.
Marie Patrick appeared mollified and released Paddy to his parents. His father
led him out of the church by the ear for the long walk home. Paddy knew what he
was in for once they got there. His father would take him to the attic door and
open it and show him the big black belt that hung drooping from a hook. Mr.
Gilhooley had even spliced the end of the belt so it would look like a
serpent's tongue.
Whenever
Paddy acted up around the house, Mr. Gilhooley would take the belt off the
hook, wrap it around his fist and smack the tongue of the belt against his palm
while telling Paddy if he ever did it again--whatever it was the boy had done
on that occasion--the belt would be applied to his keister till he couldn't sit
for a month. Paddy would immediately show sheer terror and say that he would
never do whatever it was again.
Year
later, Paddy, now a retired attorney, could laugh about all this as he told the
story to his grandchildren. It was especially funny to Paddy because his father
never hit him with the belt even though Sr. Marie Patrick had called his father
several times to report that Paddy had continued to fart, albeit in the
classroom and not in church.
Notre
Dame in those years won several national football championships. As a result,
Mr. Gilhooley continued to fart proudly and sing his heart out on many Saturday
afternoons in autumn.
In
eighth grade, Paddy was allowed to join in the farting himself but he would
never join in the singing. His mother would never have allowed it. The poor
woman couldn't tell one fart from another so she knew nothing about Paddy's
participation at that level. But she always told neighbors that when you
compared Paddy and his father, the apple didn't fall far from the tree.
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