The Standard Journal

The sage of the offered hand

- By DAVID SHRIBMAN

KENNEBUNKP­ORT, Maine -- He wants to see the Houston Astros play in the World Series, which is possible this year. He wants to see the Houston Texans in the Super Bowl, perhaps a few years off. Mostly he wants to ride the highspeed rail train from Houston to Dallas, which won't be ready until 2023.

George H.W. Bush is a 93-year-old with a formi- dable bucket list. He's in a wheelchair, and his wife, Barbara, uses a walker and a motorized scooter. The other day, Jean Becker, his chief of staff, told him the highspeed rail project in Texas might not be completed until he is 99. "I'm in," he told her.

Nearly four decades ago, Bush, energy and urgency personifie­d, campaigned for president by asserting that he was "up for the ' 80s." The 41st president, now America's most beloved senior citi- zen and most respected senior statesman, is still upbeat. Ask him a question and he says, "Sure." Ask another and he answers, "Yes!" Follow up with a third and he asks, "Why not?"

He's back here i n Maine, in the grand compound once known as the Summer White House, which is still a tourist destinatio­n attracting dozens of visitors to a wayside viewing area a quarter-mile away. The surf crashes against the concrete wall, the mallards gather on the grassy slope.

For most of his life, he has come here in summertime, walking the rocky beach at the base of the point, cruising the inlets in a cigarette boat that still takes him a few times each summer south to the beach town of Ogunquit, there to have a shore dinner overlookin­g tranquil Perkins Cove.

There are five pictures of him scattered around the wood-paneled walls of Barnacle Billy's restaurant. Diners pause from their lobsters and steamed clams to inquire about "the president." No one asks which president

they mean.

"President Bush is a bit like a mountain," said Jon Meacham, the Pulitzer Prize- winning author who recently wrote a biography of Bush. "You can best understand his formidable dimensions from a suitable distance." Meacham was here last week to deliver a homily -- the topic, "Faith and Doubt," hauntingly appropriat­e for the times -at St. Ann's, the Episcopal summer church constructe­d of sea- washed stones and hard pine hammer- beam trusses where Bush's parents were married.

The sun rises on America here. During Bush's presidency, from 1989 to 1993, the gray clapboard house on Walker's Point, with its breathtaki­ng ocean views, was an unrivaled seaside power center. John Major of Great Britain, Brian Mulroney of Canada, Yitzhak Rabin of Israel, Lech Walesa of Poland and King Hussein of Jordan -all figures now of history, some only dimly remembered -- were feted here, felt the bracing breezes here, smelled the salt air here.

Years later, when his son, George W. Bush, was president, Vladimir Putin of Russia walked the promontory that juts into the icy Atlantic here. Later, the three presidents went fishing.

The elder president, then a mere 83, pushed the boat, a little perilously, to top speed. Until recently, it was the only speed he knew. ( There apparently were no speed limits for golf carts during his presidenti­al years at Cape Arundel Golf Club, when Bush pioneered a new sport that he called speed-golf.)

Now the speed is gone from Bush, and now his guests tend to be family members. The other day, the clouds low and the Maine sky a frosty, forbidding gray, Bush, wearing a royal blue sweater and expertly pressed khakis, was in his office. Outside, his daughter, Doro, pulled up in a car with a load of supplies. Former Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida, in plaid shorts and a light gray T-shirt, strolled by. "He's slowed down, but he's still got his game, and he's still telling jokes," the younger Bush said. Then he added: "Both my mom and dad are special people."

That is a son's tribute to his parents, a sentiment, t o be sure, repeated countless times by children in their 60s about parents in their 90s. But George and Barbara Bush hold a special place in American life today, when the red-hot issues of the late 1980s and early 1990s have faded to sepia brown, when the passions of the time seem tame compared to those that spill across cable television now and when the country seems to yearn for the civility of the Bush years, today remembered fondly, even nostalgica­lly.

Bush is the last of a breed, the sort that celebrates breeding -- a discomfiti­ng notion, perhaps, in a democratic nation -- but that also prizes public service and makes way, in time and with grace and generosity, for the new and for the unfamiliar, sometimes even the uncomforta­ble. That, above all, was Bush's ideology. "He is the personific­ation of a great citizen," said Andrew H. Card, transporta­tion secretary under the first President Bush and White House chief of staff under the second.

Bush -- a "servant leader," in the words of Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio -was a conservati­ve, but primarily what he conserved were the old values: modesty and manners. He did not fit Theodore Roosevelt's prescripti­on of a president who had to know "how to play the popular hero and shoot a bear."

But he could f i ght fiercely; former Gov. Michael S. Dukakis, whom he defeated i n 1988, could testify to that, and so could former Rep. Newt Gingrich, who mercilessl­y pilloried the president for compromisi­ng with the Democrats on taxes in 1990. Bush -- a master of statecraft if not always of speechcraf­t -hewed to the notion, and the hope, expressed in his Inaugural Address, that "this is the age of the offered hand." That is all the more appealing today, in the age of the clenched fist.

"His health is not good, and for the most part he is disabled," said Marlin Fitzwater, Bush's former press secretary, who visited recently. "Yet just bei ng around him and knowing what he stands for is inspiratio­nal." And ironic, for here in coastal Maine, where the sun first hits American soil, its oldest president is in his sunset years.

David M. Shribman is executive editor of the Post- Gazette ( dshribman@ post- gazette. com, 412 263-1890). Follow him on Twitter at ShribmanPG.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States