Backward, turn backward,
O Time, in your flight
make me a child again
just for to-night!
~Elizabeth Akers Allen
When I was three or four, I got my first Halloween costume – a bought costume. Baw got it for me at Tyrell’s, the five and dime on Main Street. It was a happy witch, complete with black wig, plastic dress, and sparkly hat, not to mention the plastic mask which was guaranteed to become damp with the condensation from your hot breath in under a minute. But who cared? It was a bought mask.
This is the only bought costume I recall ever having.
I waited anxiously for Halloween to finally come so I could show off my fancy costume. I was so proud of it I wanted to wear it every single day. “It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” signaled that the big day was nigh. It only came on television once a year so you had be ready or resign yourself to waiting 364 days to see it again. I was ready.
Finally, finally the long days passed and Halloween came.
Mama helped me into the little plastic dress, arrange the fuzzy, black wig, and stretched the little rubber band around my head so that my mask was just so and I could breathe and see, sort of. Mama put on her own witch hat and long black dress, and we were off.
We went out to town to trick-or-treat in the little residential grid of three streets that joined State Street to Labaron Avenue. Back then, you were sure to get more homemade treats than not. Popcorn balls, cookies, possibly a piece of fruit or a dime. Every now and then you’d hit the jackpot and get a caramel apple. I still flat LOVE a caramel apple.
Everybody would be out on their porches, neighbors chatting and trick-or-treaters running up and down the sidewalks shrieking and laughing. There were a few jack-o-laterns smiling from the shadows, but not really much other decoration. Except for, that is, Mr. Stanley’s house down on First Street. It was big and dark and spooky, and Mr. Stanley would lurk up on the porch in the dark waiting for some unsuspecting young ‘un to creep up his walkway, the lure of a sweet treat stronger than his fear of the dark. Then, when it was least expected, a ghost would fly down from the porch to greet the innocent. Mr. Stanley would laugh and laugh then heap treats upon his little victim.
Down the street from Mr. Stanley lived the Carneys. They had a pet monkey that they kept chained to the porch. It wore diapers. This aberrance always stuck me as way yonder creepier than Mr. Stanley because he was just scarey one day a year. The Carneys and their screaming monkey were bizarre every day. At least I thought so.
Back at home, I would sort out all my goodies and gobble up my favorites, at least those that I hadn’t eaten during our trek through town. But while all the confections were naturally a delight, the real treat that year and every year after was the thrill being out in out little community, walking up and down the streets in the cool, fall night air sharing in all the eerie fun with of our friends and neighbors.
I still like to dress up like a happy witch, much to Sonny’s dismay, but it always reminds me of that very first Halloween. If I only had a caramel apple…
You never get over a family in your neighborhood with a screaming monkey chained to the front porch…it kinda stays with you for life…I wish I had a caramel apple, too.