Taking care of my queen, beekeeping, emergence, algorithms, gardening, vampires, sages of old and new, windmills, my proud dutch heritage, playing go, cowgirls, wild stallions, the culinary arts.
mandolins, lutes, minstrels of a fine sort, the occasional harp now and then
burn them you brainy bastards!
And for me, it’s leaving time.I have a grandly dramatic vision of myself stalking through the canyons of the Big Apple in the rain and cold, dreaming about driving with the soft night air of East Texas rushing on my face while Willie Nelson sings softly on the radio, or about blasting through the Panhandle under a fierce sun and pale blue sky….I’ll remember, I’ll remember…sunsets, rivers, hills, plains, the Gulf, woods, a thousand beers in a thousand joints, and sunshine and laughter. And people. Mostly I’ll remember people.There is one thing, an important thing, I have to tell you before I go. What I’m going to tell you is more than a fact. It is a Truth. I have spent six years checking it out, and I know it to be true. The people who subscribe to The Texas Observer are good people. In fact, you’re the best people in this state. I don’t care if you think that’s pretentious or sentimental—it’s just true.If I got to naming you, I would never stop, so I won’t. But please believe me that all of you whom I know and many of you whom I know only by letter are in my mind as I write this—even if I do forget your names half the time. Always excepting, of course, the turkey who sends me hate mail after my annual gun-control editorial. Turkey, turkey, turkey.I wanted to call this “The Long Goodbye†but Kaye won’t let me. She wanted to call it “Ivins Indulges in Horrible Fit of Sentimentality.â€I love you. Good-bye my friends. The closing paragraphs of Molly’s goodbye column to Texas Observer readers published June 18, 1976, as she left to join The New York Times.http://www.texasobserver.org/