By Bill W.
In
his seventieth year, and on the twenty-first of March, my friend and
sponsor "Ebby" passed beyond our sight and hearing.
On
a chill November afternoon in 1934 it was Ebby who had brought me the
message that saved my life. Still more importantly, he was the bearer
of the Grace and of the principles that shortly afterward led to my
spiritual awakening. This was truly a call to new life in the Spirit.
It was the kid of rebirth that has since become the most precious
possession of each and all of us.
As
I looked upon him where he lay in perfect repose, I was stirred by
poignant memories of all the years I had known and loved him.
There
were recollections of those joyous days in a Vermont boarding school.
After the war years we were sometimes together, then drinking of
course.
Alcohol,
we thought, was the solvent for all difficulties, a veritable elixir
for good living.
Then
there was that absurd episode of 1929. Ebby and I were on an
all-night spree in Albany. Suddenly we remembered that a new airfield
had been constructed in Vermont, on a pasture near my own home town.
The opening day was close at hand. Then came the intoxicating
thought: If only we could hire a plane we'd beat the opening by
several days, thus making aviation history ourselves! Forthwith, Ebby
routed a pilot friend out of bed, and for a stiff price we engaged
him and his small craft. We sent the town fathers a wire announcing
the time of our arrival. In midmorning, we took to the air, greatly
elated -- and very tight.
Somehow
our rather tipsy pilot set us down on the field. A large crowd,
including the village band and a welcoming committee, lustily cheered
his feat. The pilot then deplaned. But nothing else happened, nothing
at all. The onlookers stood in puzzled silence. Where were Ebby and
Bill? Then the horrible discovery was made -- we were both slumped in
the rear cockpit of the plane, completely passed out! Kind friends
lifted us down and stood us upon the ground. Whereupon we
history-makers fell flat on our faces.
Ignominiously,
we had to be carted away. The fiasco could not have been more
appalling. We spent the next day shakily writing apologies.
Over
the following five years, I seldom saw Ebby. But of course our
drinking went on and on. In late 1934 I got a terrific jolt when I
learned that Ebby was about to be locked up, this time in a state
mental hospital.
Following
a serious of mad sprees, he had run his father's new Packard off the
road and into the side of a dwelling, smashing right into its
kitchen, and just missing a terrified housewife. Thinking to east
this rather awkward situation, Ebby summoned his brightest smile and
said, "Well, my dear, how about a cup of coffee?"
Of
course Ebby's lighthearted humor was quite lost on everyone
concerned. Their patience worn thin, the town fathers yanked him into
court. To all appearances, Ebby's final destination was the insane
asylum. To me, this marked the end of the line for us both. Only a
short time before, my physician, Dr. Silkworth, had felt obliged to
tell Lois there was no hope of my recovery; that I, too would have to
be confined, else risk insanity or death.
But
providence would have it otherwise. It was presently learned that
Ebby had been paroled into the custody of friends who (for the time
being) had achieved their sobriety in the Oxford Groups. They brought
Ebby to New York where he fell under the benign influence of AA's
great friend-to-be, Dr. Sam Shoemaker, the rector of Calvary
Episcopal Church. Much affected by Sam and the "O.G." Ebby
promptly sobered up. Hearing of my serious condition, he had
straight-way come to our house in Brooklyn.
As
I continued to recollect, the vision of Ebby looking at me across our
kitchen table became wonderfully vivid. As most AAs know, he spoke to
me of the release from hopelessness that had come to him (through the
Oxford Groups) as the result of self-survey, restitution, outgoing
helpfulness to others, and prayer. In short, he was proposing the
attitudes and principles that I used later in developing AA's Twelve
Steps to recovery.
It
had happened. One alcoholic had effectively carried the message to
another. Ebby had been enabled to bring me the gift of Grace because
he could reach me at depth through the language of the heart. He had
pushed ajar that great gate through which all in AA have since passed
to find their freedom under God.
Bill's
tribute to Ebby, his sponsor, was printed in the © AA Grapevine on
June 1966.
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