CSotD: Tricks, Treats & Suchlike

Dogs and Halloween aren’t always a good combination, but today’s Bliss (Tribune) brought back a memory of a ridgeback who enjoyed dressing up.

Some of my dogs have tolerated it, some haven’t, but he thought it was fun, so one time I put him in a Canadiens jersey, balanced a hockey helmet on his head and sat him on a neighbor’s doorstep with a treat bucket, then rang the doorbell and hid behind a bush.

He also thought having kids come to our door was a great idea and would stick his enormous head out to greet them. One tiny fellow came back about 15 minutes later and his father explained that he didn’t need another candy bar. He just wanted to see the dog again.

BTW, I know some people who call their dogs by saying “treat.” Problem with that is that if you run out of treats, you run out of leverage. I’ll admit that my current dog certainly knows the word “cookie,” but I summon her by whistling.

This Flying McCoys (AMS) didn’t blow me away except that it sparked a warm memory of the little old lady who lived next door when I was four or five. Aunt Effie — as she insisted we call her — gave out popcorn balls each Halloween and I think I liked getting them from her more than I liked eating them.

Homemade treats are no longer a thing at Halloween, thanks to false rumors of doctored candy and apples. For a time, people would bring their kids’ candy to the hospital to have it x-rayed, but when my son was working the ER, he’d advise them to just throw it out and buy a fresh bag, which would be less expensive than firing up the x-ray machine.

When the 1950 Census was released, I looked up Aunt Effie. Turns out that sweet little old lady was about 10 years younger than I am now.

Reality Check (AMS) lives up to its name with this one. Bummer bummer, but I did laugh.

I think getting divorced at 34 saved me from a midlife crisis by dragging me through the wringer while I was still young enough for some course correction, though I’m not sure that counts as being lucky. But my dad changed careers when he was 50 and, while he’d been successful in his first go-round, he was a lot happier in his new gig.

It’s never too late.

This is an oldie from Francis Dahl, who was a longtime very local cartoonist for a variety of Boston papers.

This particular strip has always amused me with its dark irony, but also comes to mind whenever people talk about the burning of witches. The whole issue of witches is clothed in some mythology and some outright nonsense, but there really were trials and executions in the Middle Ages.

The burst of trials in Salem lasted less than a full year and was deeply regretted quite soon, though that’s of little comfort to the dozen and a half people who were executed. Still, honesty matters and what happened was not a major feature of the Puritan culture, which had enough other flaws for historians to deal with.

And witchcraft, to the extent that it had ever existed at all, had little to do with modern phenomena. Several years ago, the Atlantic had an in-depth takedown of Wicca and allied movements, which were largely invented out of whole cloth by Aleister Crowley and his cronies, but it’s now behind a paywall. However, if you have a subscription, it’s worth a read.

But there’s a very nice collection of Dahl cartoons at Who’s Out There, together with an appreciation of his contributions to cartooning and to Boston.

It’s not behind a paywall and it’s a lot more fun reading anyway.

Here’s refutation of a different Halloween myth. The holey sheet gag (say that quickly) originally starred young Linus Van Pelt, when he was still a little kid and hadn’t reached that magic age at which Peanuts characters stop aging.

It was transferred to Charlie Brown when the TV specials began, but it’s not canon, at least to those of us who had been Peanuts fans before the strip was animated.

And speaking of former babies in the Peanuts universe, Schroeder started out as a tiny tot, which made the toy piano gag a little more credible.

I came across this one while looking for the other and thought I’d add it to the day because they’ve just discovered a new Chopin waltz, making it newsworthy. And I like Snoopy’s foot fluttering with joy, which is how you know you’ve hit just the right spot with a dog.

Ruben Bolling also resurrects the Peanuts gang for this Tom the Dancing Bug political gibe. Bolling has been re-running political pieces on social media for the past month in preparation for Tuesday, but this is a new one.

And, alas, it’s much darker than the strip it’s satirizing, but, then, we’re living in much darker times. I will say, however, that he’s done a far better job than most satirists of capturing faces and gestures from the original.

In a few days, we’ll find out if this is still funny.

Here’s a bit of truly dark humor from Cornered (AMS), which took me a minute but then got a hearty, guilty laugh.

It reminds me of one of my most questionable moments as a father, when my son begged for a ghost story as we were camped out on the shores of a small lake and, after he promised he wouldn’t be scared, I told him the tale of the Golden Arm.

The story was scary enough for someone who was eight or nine years old, but it had a little extra zing because we had walked around the lake earlier, when it was still light out, and seen the mausoleum on the opposite shore.

What? He asked for a ghost story. He begged for a ghost story. When I told him I knew one but it was too scary, he assured me that it wasn’t.

But I promise you, in the years that followed, he got me back numerous times.

Now here’s a Halloween tradition from when I was a little guy:

12 thoughts on “CSotD: Tricks, Treats & Suchlike

  1. Historical accuracy would threaten the very lucrative witchcraft tourism business in Salem. (The /Salem News/ even has a flying witch on its masthead.)

    1. The one thing I remember from a tour of Salem and the House of the Seven Gables some 40 or so years ago is that all paint was made with sour milk. Waste not, want not.

    2. As a 17th century re-enactor of 30+ years experience, and someone who just assisted a direct descendent of Mary Bradbury (the one woman accused but escaped) in making tombstones for her and her husband’s graves, don’t get me started on the current Salem tourist trade. Or Plymouth, for that matter. For some reason, down here in Virginia (I’m a member of the re-enactment community based around Jamestown) we’re able to bring in the tourist bucks while not playing nearly as fast and loose with the actual history.

      For starters, the first Thanksgiving was in 1619. In Virginia.

    3. At one point in Heinlein’s “The Moon is a Harsh Mistress“, Mannie (the narrarator) notes after a visit to Salem that they must have “hanged the wrong witches”.

  2. Happy Halloween, my friend.

    Our little dog will not tolerate any costumes, and in fact completely freezes, paralyzed, if anything heavier than her collar is draped over or tied on. It makes her less fun during holidays but easier to immobilize when necessary.

    I appreciate you setting the record straight on which Peanuts character wore the holey sheet. Those who know, know. But Peanuts canon is a tricky thing. Too many inconsistencies and contradictions. To quote the theme song of the great Mystery Science Theater 3000, “It’s just a show, I should really just relax.”

    I generally object to Peanuts pastiches, and refuse to “Like” memes that put non-Schulz words into his characters’ mouths, even if I agree with their message. But Bolling is a pro and this one is good. Buying into a Trumpian worldview is as insane as a dog thinking he’s a World War I flying ace, yet somehow we laugh at one and let the other vote.

    We’ll see next week how many delusional flying aces there really are out there. What a world, what a world.

    1. Yeah, what makes the satire work so well is the way Bolling juxtaposes Snoopy’s classic “Red Baron” fantasy with MAGAts who’ve been deluded into thinking they’re “fighting the good fight” against liberals, transgenders, immigrants, and other boogeymen.

      That, and the artwork/writing is spot-on.

  3. It is important to remember that while only nineteen people were executed as witches in Salem, something like 50,000 people were executed as witches in Europe.

    It’s not all about US.

    1. I can’t confirm the numbers but I can confirm that you’re talking about a very different era. Consider what was happening to Jews and Moors and heretics in Spain during that same period, as well as how people were treated during the 100 Years War.

      As I said, it was a real issue in the Middle Ages, but it certainly wasn’t the only issue then. For that matter, comparing one year in Salem to what happened during the 30 Years War or what Cromwell did in Ireland during roughly the same era should also provide some focus.

      At least nobody’s turned those other events into a merry tourism industry.

      1. More of the Early Modern era than the Middle Ages, incidentally. https://historyforatheists.com/2019/08/review-nathan-johnstone-the-new-atheism-myth-and-history/ has a discussion about Witch Crazes, albeit in the context of reviewing what a pop history gets wrong more generally. (The whole blog’s worth reading — take any of the Great Myths articles — but it hasn’t got an essay specifically about witch trials that I can find.)

        Incidentally the 40-50,000 persons executed for witchcraft is a count covering Europe for about three hundred years, or something like 250 people per year across a population of somewhere around 100,000,000, which does not excuse any of these wrongful executions but does make them look like one of hte lesser problems in the law of the day.

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