Many times I seek
refuge on the dance floor. It’s a safe place, a fantasy zone where all is music,
harmony, and the one I love. In an ideal world the dance floor is about order,
it is a universe in miniature, orbits within orbits. In reality, though, the
dance floor is much more like the real world.. There are dancers who do the West
Coast Swing to a samba, those who do a travelling dance while most people are
doing a slot dance, and those to whom the beat is just a suggestion to be
ignored as they see fit. To those who would say the electoral temperature and
disharmony on the dance floor are both symptoms of the unraveling of society, I
offer two tidbits:
The election of
1828 pit Andrew Jackson, a man famed for his temper who had participated in
several duels, against John Quincy Adams, a man falsely accused of playing pimp
to the Russian czar and misappropriating government funds for the purchase of a
pool table. The conflict between the two candidates became so heated that, after
arriving in Washington for his inauguration, Jackson refused to pay the
customary courtesy call on the outgoing president. And John Quincy Adams
reciprocated by refusing to attend the inauguration of Jackson.
The waltz was
introduced to England sometime between 1790 and 1812 and was brought to France
when Napoleon’s triumphal soldiers returned from Germany in 1805. As the first
closed position dance done by aristocracy, the waltz gained a scandalous
reputation. After all, dancers actually embraced, holding each other so close
their bodies and even faces touched while they danced. Women were thrown around
exuberantly, something considered immoral and even sinful at the time. In
England, Anglican archbishops denounced the waltz as “a lust-inducing, decidedly
degenerate action to be left to those hot-blooded, silly foreigners.”
So what should a
level-headed person make of these examples. Maybe that the good old days weren’t
always all that good and that today’s “scandal” will be tomorrow’s humorous
footnote, For me it simply means that this Tuesday, after I’ve cast my vote I’ll
step onto the dance floor and I’ll try to appreciate the ordered chaos that is
dancing and our nation and simply marvel at the fact both continue unscathed in
spite of all the so-called experts’ predictions of perdition and woe.