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Arthur Earl
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This is Father's Day,
2004. When my Father passed away in 1992, he didn't want
a fancy funeral. We had a gathering of family members at
the home of my step-sister Tammy and I was asked to say
a eulogy for him. Then his wish was to have his ashes
scattered over the ocean. His passion was the sea having
served our country in the Navy for 22 years. I just want
to share what I wrote about Dad back then.
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We
are gathered here today to honor the memory of Arthur
Earl, and our presence bears testimony to the
value he held closest to his heart, the family.
First, he was a son. Born in Bartlesville, Oklahoma on
November 26, 1920 and found stubborn as a mule as his
mother said after a long labor, he was five when his
family left their log home for Oregon. The Model “T”
Ford took them first to The Dalles and later to
Portland. By now he was also a brother and the family
grew dearer to him with each new brother and sister.
He loved the outdoors and
spent many hours working in the fields or the garden. He
attended Hudson and Glencoe Elementary and Washington
High School. When his concern for his family combined
with his great love for the open seas and infinite
skies, he embarked on a twenty-two year career with the
Navy. It was 1938 when he left home to provide relief
for his dear ones financially and pursue his dream of
seeing the world.
One brother was lost while he was gone and another also
served in World War II and when news reached him that
this young man had made the ultimate sacrifice while
serving his country, he wrote home with these words of
condolence: "He is absent in body hut
his spirit will always he with us. He was good and
therefore he will be waiting for us to join him in
heaven."
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Those words he so kindly
expressed echo in our hearts today as we remember him.
The family came first and loved ones were never
forgotten. This wonderful man carried on with his noble
determination and in 1946 he met his first wife and was
now a husband and father. She gave him a son and three
daughters and he set Oregon aside to make a home for her
in her home state of Pennsylvania. He retired from the
Navy in 1960 and always concerned for the welfare of his
loved ones, he continued his education at Rutgers
University in New Jersey. It was hard to leave the
gentle countryside of Pennsylvania, but a new life was
to begin in New Jersey with employment at the Telephone
Company. In 1968, when tragedy took the wife and mother
his family loved, it was Oregon where he sought comfort
with the loved ones he had left behind so long before.
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Renewed and restored with
his closest kin, he suddenly found his family expanded
when he took a second and just as dear wife with her
four youngins' under his wing. Always a father and
brother and son his life grew richer and his love
stronger and he retired from his second career after
twenty years. He bowled and fished and traveled his
retirement years, always with family as his companion
and inspiration. His joy grew and grew and he became
grandfather and great-grandfather as well. Like his
father before him, this man’s spirit was made stronger by
the love that surrounded him. He may now not be with us
in body but he lives forever in our hearts and with his
passing we gather to say goodbye and thank you and pay
tribute to Arthur Earl and imagine him to recite to us:
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I must go down to the sea again, to the
lonely sea and the sky.
And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by.
And the wheels kick and the wind’s song and the white
sails shaking,
And a grey mist on the sea‘s face and a grey dawn
breaking.
I must go down to the seas again, for the
call of the running tide.
Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied;
and all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds
flying
and the flung spray and the flung spume and the sea
gull’s crying.
I must go down to the seas again, to the vagrant gypsy
life
To the gull’s way and the whale’s way
where the wind’s
like a whetted knife
And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow
rover
And a quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long
trick’s over.
Sleep quiet dear father, dear brother and son
and dream sweet dear love for all time to come. |
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