Lyndon State College - Northern Lights Yearbook (Lyndonville, VT)

 - Class of 1938

Page 7 of 44

 

Lyndon State College - Northern Lights Yearbook (Lyndonville, VT) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 7 of 44
Page 7 of 44



Lyndon State College - Northern Lights Yearbook (Lyndonville, VT) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 6
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Page 7 text:

January - 1938 Flood By RICHARD DOMEY Davis climbed into his trouble shoot- ing truck and nosed out into the cold damp dawn. For the last two weeks the mornings had been more or less alike, each wet with gusty winds and a steady depressing drizzle that filled every nook and cranny, every cellar and depression, even foot prints left in sandy places. At first after the warm summer the welcome rain disappeared into the thirsty earth as if by magic. Then little by little, the level spaces, the hillsides and then the wooded areas had reach- ed the saturation point. Then winter had dipped her icy fingers into the wet November weather. The earth stood still and stiff at her approach. It still rained. The already over-taxed earth presented an almost impenetrable armored surface and the falling rain trickled from the wooded areas, over the hillsides and level spaces to the rivers. Each harvested garden and every open space that had before lain choking with dust had in a fortnight become sodden and soaked and now lay drown- ing. Davis thanked his lucky stars for a comfortable house, a grand wife and three of the most perfect children in the world. He shivered at the thought of having to tramp and wallow across that soggy meadow over there on the left. The highway for him, he would stick to the world of gears and wheels awhile yet. Machines made the world go ’round, and men like him made ma- chines go. His philosophy was per- fectly simple. If everyone worked hard the machines went and the earth progressed. It was too bad that man, as clever as he is, could not have pro- vided for all this unreasonable amount of rain. He guessed God had better practice temperance. A few familiar landmarks indexed the nearness of his destination. In the distance the coppery glint of the state capitol building reared its golden dome. Silently the oily river slithered onward. A road sign just as silently sprang out of the wispy fog, for the mists had not yet left the low- lands. Montpelier, it might be said, is built at the junction of two rivers and on each, power companies had seen fit to erect a dam. As he passed that morn- ing, Mr. Davis made a mental note of the unusual volume of water topping the dam, even with the spillways full open and roaring with the foamy tide. For once the power magnates need not worry. Their dynamos would have power and plenty; maybe too much. In times past, Montpelier merchants had been forced to suffer large losses due to flooded cellars in the lower part of the city because of unforseen high waters. They had seen fit to protect themselves with a curfew which auto- matically warned them in time to allow the safe removal of their valuable stock, when the treacherous stream reached a certain danger point. By the visible indicator on the cur- few tower Mr. Davis imagined that the warning whistle must have performed its duty not so very long ago. That night after finishing his work. [3]

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Page 8 text:

V E R L Y N Davis sat eating his supper in a down- town restaurant. The door slammed as the clock beat out the hour of six. Davis crumpled his napkin, rose and sauntered to the coat rack. He contem- plated the glistening street with a wary eye as he struggled into his jacket. Behind the hotel across the pave- ment the silent river continued its ceaseless, fettered way. Davis bit his toothpick in two, paid his check and went out. He did not enter his hotel as he ordinarily would have done but climbed into his car and it was not many minutes before he was rolling along the broad highway that stretch- ed away to the north, out of the valley to higher, safer ground. That night he would sleep more easily. His dreams presumably would not be troubled by rushing rivers and straining dams. The luminous dial of a ticking watch shone faintly through the Stygian gloom. The hour was eleven. There came a heavy step outside the door, a sharp rap followed quickly by another. Mr. Davis opened the door to be con- fronted by the landlord who stood up- on the threshold. In one breath and half another Mr. Davis was informed that he must leave. Flood waters were rising and the dam above the town was reported to be in danger. The strain was nearly to the breaking point. A few minutes later, truck, landlord and three choice pigs were heading for higher ground. Then, pork and owner safely deposited, man and truck sped back to town to hear reports. The railway station was packed to overflowing. Message after message crackled over the sagging wires. Stories of death and disaster came in dots and dashes. Across the room a woman sobbed quietly. In her hand she held a bit of ribbon and a tiny shoe. Davis with the rest watched the op- erator as would a gambler the wheel of Fortune. He, with the rest, noticed a sudden intensity of concentration in the manager’s air. His nervous fingers clenched and with the other hand he adjusted the ear-phones a little more carefully. Evidently the need for a written message was unnecessary, for suddenly the pencil dropped and quite without warning the operator faced the breathless group. “Any of you fellows a mechanic? Waterbury is calling for gasoline and fuel and a couple of experts. They are in a bad way and say that our road is the only possible entrance. You know, the one that’s being cemented.” There was silence except for the heavy breathing and the scuffing of nervous feet. The tense crowd moved uneasily. A couple of overall-clad workmen looked at each other, one shook his head; they broke the gaze and dropped their eyes. Davis felt stifled, his throat was dry and his hands wet. The woman suck- ed in her breath hesitatingly in little broken gasps. She no longer cried aloud but only sat and stared at the bit of pale yellow ribbon and little wrinkled shoe that was a little scuffed. Fifty miles to the westward his fam- ily would be waiting in helpless anxi- ety. Why not go home instead of risk- ing his life on such a hazardous mis- sion at this was certain to be. One by one the faces of his family rose before him. Each turned away, silent thoughts unspoken. The old house with that funny misshapen shrub, the uneven lawn, the crack on the second step [4]

Suggestions in the Lyndon State College - Northern Lights Yearbook (Lyndonville, VT) collection:

Lyndon State College - Northern Lights Yearbook (Lyndonville, VT) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Lyndon State College - Northern Lights Yearbook (Lyndonville, VT) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Lyndon State College - Northern Lights Yearbook (Lyndonville, VT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Lyndon State College - Northern Lights Yearbook (Lyndonville, VT) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Lyndon State College - Northern Lights Yearbook (Lyndonville, VT) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Lyndon State College - Northern Lights Yearbook (Lyndonville, VT) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950


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