| He is home now. He is free. In his final letter
to the American people, Dad wrote, "I now begin the journey that
will lead me into the sunset of my life." This evening, he has
arrived.
History will record his worth as a leader. We here have long since measured
his worth as a man. Honest, compassionate, graceful, brave. He was the
most plainly decent man you could ever hope to meet.
He used to say, "A gentleman always does the kind thing."
And he was a gentleman in the truest sense of the word. A gentle man.
Big as he was, he never tried to make anyone feel small. Powerful as
he became, he never took advantage of those who were weaker. Strength,
he believed, was never more admirable than when it was applied with
restraint. Shopkeeper, doorman, king or queen, it made no difference,
Dad treated everyone with the same unfailing courtesy. Acknowledging
the innate dignity in us all.
The idea that all people are created equal was more than mere words
on a page, it was how he lived his life. And he lived a good, long life.
The kind of life good men lead. But I guess I'm just telling you things
you already know.
Here's something you may not know, a little Ronald Reagan trivia for
you, his entire life, Dad had an inordinate fondness for earlobes. Even
as a boy, back in Dixon, Ill., hanging out on a street corner with his
friends, they knew that if they were standing next to Dutch, sooner
or later, he was going to reach over and grab hold of their lobe, give
it a workout there. Sitting on his lap watching TV as a kid, same story.
He would have hold of my ear lobe. I'm surprised I have any lobes left
after all of that.
And you didn't have to be a kid to enjoy that sort of treatment. Serving
in the Screen Actors Guild with his great friend William Holden, the
actor, best man at his wedding, Bill got used to it. They would be there
at the meetings, and Dad would have hold of his earlobe. There they'd
be, some tense labor negotiation, two big Hollywood movie stars, hand
in earlobe.
He was, as you know, a famously optimistic man. Sometimes such optimism
leads you to see the world as you wish it were as opposed to how it
really is. At a certain point in his presidency, Dad decided he was
going to revive the thumbs-up gesture. So he went all over the country,
of course, giving everybody the thumbs up.
Doria (Ron Reagan's wife) and I found ourselves in the presidential
limousine one day returning from some big event. My mother was there
and Dad was, of course, thumbs-upping the crowd along the way, and suddenly,
looming in the window on his side of the car, was this snarling face.
This fellow was reviving an entirely different hand gesture. And hoisted
an entirely different digit in our direction. Dad saw this and without
missing a beat turned to us and said, "You see? I think it's catching
on."
Dad was also a deeply, unabashedly religious man. But he never made
the fatal mistake of so many politicians wearing his faith on his sleeve
to gain political advantage. True, after he was shot and nearly killed
early in his presidency, he came to believe that God had spared him
in order that he might do good. But he accepted that as a responsibility,
not a mandate. And there is a profound difference.
Humble as he was, he never would have assumed a free pass to heaven.
But in his heart of hearts, I suspect he felt he would be welcome there.
And so he is home. He is free.
Those of us who knew him well will have no trouble imagining his paradise.
Golden fields will spread beneath a blue dome of a western sky. Live
oaks will shadow the rolling hillsides. And someplace, flowing from
years long past, a river will wind toward the sea. Across those fields,
he will ride a gray mare he calls Nancy D. They will sail over jumps
he has built with his own hands. He will, at the river, carry him over
the shining stones. He will rest in the shade of the trees.
Our cares are no longer his. We meet him now only in memory. But we
will join him soon enough. All of us. When we are home. When we are
free.
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