Charles Glass pays tribute to the man who was his measure in all things, and whom he thought, like all sons, would be there forever
When the sun lowers itself into the Pacific Ocean, west of California, it has a way of lingering on the horizon that makes you imagine it will stay for ever. It is perhaps less bright than at its zenith, but more beautiful. You don’t want to let it go. Then, just as you are sure it won’t disappear, it does.
The other day, my older son and I walked along the beach near my father’s house between Los Angeles and San Diego. We did not talk much, and I forgot to tell him that in that same briney wash north of us my father taught me to body-surf and to fish. My son is 30 years old, a year older than my father was when I was born. My father was always the measure. He finished school at 17, as did I. I studied philosophy at university, as he did. He refused his father’s offer to take over the family firm with its assured income and thousands of employees, much as I did not follow him into the law under an inscription that would have pleased him, ‘Glass & Son, Attorneys at Law’. We were both 21 when we ventured overseas, he sailing as a merchant marine and naval officer in 1942, me as a grad student in 1972. He came home five years later. I never returned.
He married my mother when he was 28. I married at 26. He had his first child, me, at 30. Mine came when I was 27, but it felt strange to get ahead of him. His marriage lasted five years, mine for 17. He had a second wife, for a year, and a third, whom he loved profoundly and happily, for 40. God, he was lucky. I have yet to find a second, putting him well ahead of me.
As a youngster, he made his father proud. He was a champion American football player at Loyola High School, one of the 11 players chosen in 1937 as the best in all of Los Angeles. I did not play football. At law school, he finished first in his class and came top in his examinations for the California bar. That may have softened Grandad’s disappointment that neither of his sons would assume the family business. As a son, I was proud of my father too. But I did not give him much to be proud of.
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Kelly Hartmann
May 20th, 2008 9:29amDear Uncle Charlie: I wanted to tell you that your article on Grandpa chuck was wonderful. There isn't a day that goes by that I don't think of him. You know he tought me how to ride my first bike w/out training wheels, He also brought me to London after you came home he was my best friend and I miss him so very much. I think your tribute to him was lovely and I know how lucky and proud he was that you were his son. He talked about you all the time and with a smile that would light up the room. Love you always your niece Kelly