| «We have not come so much to a fork in the road, as a fork on the plate,
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| scraping the last lick off the gravy train of history»
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| There was nervous laughter round from the dais that rolled outwards through the
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| crowd on a breeze that rustled flags and banners.
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| It was the voice of Orson Welles, his baritone coming to us over decades of
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| dead silence through a metallic tannoy, each word meticulously tape-spliced
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| from various soundtracks and radio broadcasts in the Library of Congress.
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| It wowed the crowd before it fluttered and faltered as the powder of lost oxide
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| caused a catch in his voice just as the spool ran out.
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| Curiously, the simulated address seemed to be delivered in the same, strange,
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| stage-Irish accent that Welles had possibly purloined from the actor,
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| Michael MacLiammóir, when he had bluffed his way onto the Dublin stage as a
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| teenager.
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| Now it was just one in a queue of immigrant inflections that might have taken
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| the day.
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| It was also the voice that Orson had used in «Lady From Shanghai».
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| You know, the one with the shootout amidst the shattered reflections of fun
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| house mirrors.
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| Few remembered that motion picture now.
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| One man in the third row remarked to his wife that he seemed to remember this
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| voice selling him sweet sherry in his youth but there were many in the crowd
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| who knew nothing of this «Citizen"and the «Kane"he had once raised,
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| back when the worst one could imagine was an invasion from another sphere.
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| After the peace was negotiated and the internet switched off, knowledge
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| returned to its medieval cloister, in this and that illuminated volume,
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| the jealous possession of the pious and the superstitious, who might once
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| again wield ignorance like a scythe.
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| There were but dimly remembered facsimiles after many of the public libraries
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| had been torched. |
| Untouched books now went for the price of a Vuitton handbag.
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| Ever since the U.S. Mint was sucked dry and spat out, bookworms paid for rare
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| tomes with wheelbarrows full of banknotes, some of them worthless Confederate
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| money, stashed in plinths of various toppled statues.
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| They bartered it on a Mississippi square with the irony and arrogance of
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| victors.
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| None of it helped the healing.
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| Yet in the absence of a noble woman or a statesman equal to the task,
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| a tireless engineer had magically assembled the random words of Welles'
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| oration into a speech worthy of the occasion from the depths of the national
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| archive.
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| President Swift gave a slight, shy smile of pearl and pillar-box red and began
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| to sing a plain song of her acceptance. |