Robert Gardner -- The Verdict
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Just to show the faithful reader that this column is not necessarily
made up of meaningless fluff, I shall embark on an educational venture.
The subject: quicksand.
Once upon a time, or in the beginning -- take your choice -- we had
quicksand around here, particularly in our rivers. Because I haven’t the
foggiest idea of the origin or cause of quicksand, the educational part
of this venture will be a bit short. You simply have to accept my word
that quicksand existed.
Quicksand was a staple of certain class B -- or C or D -- movies in
which the only unforgettable moment was when the villain met his
well-deserved end by drowning in a large puddle of quicksand. It was
unforgettable -- a hand and a fist protruding out of a sea of quicksand,
the hand clutching and unclutching helplessly. You just can’t beat a
class B or C movie for sheer drama, and that was the general image of
quicksand. Ours wasn’t quite so dramatic.
The best way I can describe quicksand is to say it is a combination of
sand and water that looks like sand, but the percentage of sand is a
little thin. After every heavy rainstorm, we had puddles in our riverbeds
that looked like ordinary puddles of water but weren’t. They were little
puddles of quicksand. Thus, when you stepped into what looked like sand
covered with a thin sheet of water, to your shock, you sank.
Fortunately for all of us urchins who played in or with quicksand, the
quicksand around here was invariably shallow, no more than hip deep.
Nevertheless, it was great fun to lure an unwary city boy out into a
patch of quicksand and leave him screaming, visions of the movie
villain’s demise running through his mind, while he tried helplessly to
flounder out of it. You can’t beat urchin boys for pure torture. I am
sure teenage boys were used as torturers during the Spanish Inquisition.
Then the powers that be paved the bottoms of all our rivers and the
quicksand disappeared. And so with the relentless passage of time, we
have lost, together with the saber-toothed tiger and the mastodon,
quicksand.
I don’t rightly know what urchins do today to torture other urchins
but haven’t the slightest doubt that they have developed something
suitable.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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