Just to Say Thanks
By William F. Buckley Jr.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This ran as William F.
Buckley Jr.'s March 26, 1981, "On the Right" column in
National
Review.
For many years I have labored under the
burden of an unrequited passion. What have I done for it, in return for
all it has done for me? Nothing. But I have wondered what I could use as
what the journalists call a "peg."
I have found one. This may strike some of the literal-minded as
attenuated, but it goes as follows: This is the centennial year of the
Tuskegee Institute, which was founded on the Fourth of July, 1881, by
Booker T. Washington. Tuskegee continues to be a remarkable institution,
and former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld is the head of a committee
of illustrious men and women who are devoting themselves to raising $20
million to encourage it in its noble work.
What noble work? We have arrived at step two. It was, among other
things, the principal academic home of George Washington Carver, and it
was G. W. Carver who to all intents and purposes invented the peanut. What
he did, more specifically, was document that the cultivation of the peanut
despoiled the land far less than the cultivation of cotton, and then he
set out to merchandise the peanut in order that there might be a market
for it.
He discovered an estimated three hundred uses for it, many of them
entirely removed from the peanut's food value. But it is this, of course,
that is the wonder of the peanut. The Encyclopedia Britannica informs us
that "pound for pound peanuts have more protein, minerals, and vitamins
than beef liver, more fat than heavy cream, and more food energy
(calories) than sugar." And George Washington Carver discovered — peanut
butter.
I have never composed poetry, but if I did, my very first couplet would
be:
I know that I shall never see
A poem lovely as Skippy's peanut butter.
When I was first married and made plain to my wife that I expected
peanut butter for breakfast every day of my life, including Ash Wednesday,
she thought me quite mad (for the wrong reasons). She has not come round,
really, and this is a source of great sadness to me because one wants to
share one's pleasures.
I was hardened very young to the skeptics. When I was twelve I was
packed off to a British boarding school by my father, who dispatched every
fortnight a survival package comprising a case of grapefruit and a large
jar of peanut butter. I offered to share my tuck with the other boys at my
table. They grabbed instinctively for the grapefruit — but one after
another actually spit out the peanut butter, which they had never before
seen and which only that very year (1938) had become available for sale in
London. No wonder they needed American help to win the war.
You can find it now in specialty shops in Europe, but I have yet to see
it in anyone's home. And it is outrageously difficult to get even in the
typical American hotel. My profession requires me to spend forty or fifty
nights on the road every year, and when it comes time to order breakfast
over the telephone I summon my resolution — it helps to think about peanut
butter when you need moral strength — and add, after the orange juice,
coffee, skim milk, and whole-wheat toast, "Do you have any peanut butter?"
Sometimes the room service operator will actually break out laughing
when the request is put in, at which point my voice becomes stern and
unsmiling. Often the operator will say, "Just a minute," and then she will
turn, I suppose to the chef, but I can hear right through the hand she has
put over the receiver — "Hey Jack. We got any peanut butter? Room 322
wants some peanut butter!" This furtive philistinism is then regularly
followed by giggles all around. One lady recently asked, "How old is your
little boy and does he want a peanut butter sandwich? To which I replied,
"My little boy is twenty-eight and is never without peanut butter, because
he phones ahead before he confirms hotel reservations."
I introduced Auberon Waugh to cashew butter ten years ago when he first
visited America, and although I think it inferior to peanut butter Auberon
was quite simply overwhelmed. You can't find it in Great Britain so I sent
him a case from the Farmer's Market. It quite changed his writing style:
for about ten months he was at peace with the world. I think that was the
time he said something pleasant about Harold Wilson. In the eleventh
month, it was easy to tell that he had run out. It quite changes your
disposition and your view of the world if you cannot have peanut butter
every day.
So here is yet another reason for contributing money to the Tuskegee
Institute. For all we know, but for it we'd never have tasted peanut
butter. There'd be no Planter's, no Jif, no Peter Pan — that terrible
thought reminds us of our indebtedness to George Washington Carver.
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