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Bella had a Little Lamb…

09.21.2021 by Barbara Grant //

Bell & Molly resting

My 12 year old grandchild recently complained to me that the only problem she has with her family is the way they refer to Molly, their beloved blonde lab who has been with them since the year Bell was born. “They call her the dog!” she laments, “But Molly is family; she’s a member of our family.” 

Bell & Molly waiting

I’m pretty sure Molly has always been Bell’s best friend. One of my favorite pictures is one my daughter took of the two of them sitting side by side on the steps watching for the school bus to bring her older brother home.

I felt moved to send her a note in the mail and looked through my selection of cards for something appropriate. I came across one I made of a lamb standing in the framework of a barn door. And then because of Bell’s compassion for animals, I started thinking of the vintage nursery rhyme “Mary had a Little Lamb”.

"Sheep in Doorway" artwork

Most people around my age at least vaguely remember the story. The lamb’s fleece was white as snow. And everywhere Mary went the lamb was sure to go. And sure enough he followed her to school. Even way back in the pioneer days that was against the rules. His presence made the children laugh and play so the Teacher had to turn him out. But still he lingered near and waited patiently till Mary reappeared. And then he couldn’t help himself – he ran to her and laid his head upon her arm communicating that he wasn’t afraid because he trusted Mary to keep him safe. 

Lamb drawing

Her classmates asked the Teacher what made the lamb love Mary so much (and here comes the teaching moment that somehow eluded me all these years). The Teacher told them, “You all know Mary loves the lamb. Do you realize you could also create this type of bond with gentle animals, nourish their trust and make them want to follow you? If you are always kind you can do this, too.” 

Lamb drawing

This is my version of course. I embellished it, because after doing a little research I became enlighten as to the real message of the poem. My eyes were opened to the fact that Mary really did have a little lamb. It’s a true story.

Sarah Josepha Buell Hale

I’m glad I took the time to research this, because I learned some inspiring information about the teacher. It is my own assumption (after putting two & two together) that Mary’s wise teacher was, in real life, the poet who wrote about the incident of a little lamb who followed a girl to school and caused an uproar in the classroom. The author, Sarah Josepha Buell Hale, was born in New Hampshire in 1788 and lived till 1879 – a pretty long life and quite full! 

Lamb drawing

Sarah was not only a writer; she and her husband raised five children, she taught school, became an editor of a Boston-based Ladies Magazine and Literary Gazette and activist. She campaigned for the creation of Thanksgiving to be an American holiday and other worthy causes like the completion of The Bunker Hill Monument! During the push to finally raise the funds for this obelisk in 1830, she published a plea to society to “shake off the dominion of selfishness, and make the object of their ambition, moral and mental excellence, rather than wealth…”

A woman after my own heart. I’m going to tell Bell all about Sarah Josepha Buell Hale!

Lamb drawing

* Attached are the original poem and a few resources.

http://bostonliteraryhistory.com/chapter-4/sarah-josepha-hale-1788–1879-“mary’s-lamb”-poems-our-children-designed-families-sabbath.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Had_a_Little_Lamb

https://www.nps.gov/articles/bunker-hill-monument-fair.htm

https://www.nps.gov/bost/learn/historyculture/bhm.htm

Categories // Reading Tags // kindness, teaching moments, vintage nursery rhyme

This much Sorrow

08.04.2020 by Barbara Grant //

Every Day is for the Thief by Teju Cole

Earlier this week I finished a beautifully written novel. The final chapter left me stunned. I asked my husband to stay awake so I could read it to him. He yawned through the first paragraph, again at the second. But as I moved through the poetic text his eyelids opened with interest as the author led us gently toward a solemn truth. 

Labyrinth - by Barbara Grant (from Alphabet Book https://bit.ly/2C0Z77u)

Along the way we learned the difference between a labyrinth and a maze – a subject dear to me. I walk labyrinths as a meditative prayer. I also draw and paint them. The author explains that a maze has “dead ends and false signals” while a “labyrinth’s winding paths lead, finally, to the meaningful center.”

Boating and Bob

When the image of boats entered the storyline, my husband’s interest peaked; Bob loves boating. Wherever we go he figures out a way to be near water and boats. Long ago he told me of his aversion to being placed in a nursing home in his old age. He would prefer to be placed in a boat and shoved out to sea… Which brings me back to that final chapter of Every Day is for The Thief by Teju Cole.

With closer scrutiny the narrator of the story realizes that the shapes originally seen as boats are actually coffins, “dozens of them, in different sizes and various states of completion, presented in sober and matter-of-fact array.” He quietly points to the fact that we eventually all die, but there is a truth even more difficult. It is that sometimes the old must bury their young.

I’ve read many articles about how people are coping with Covid19. One article that caught my attention was “We Can’t Comprehend This Much Sorrow” written by Teju Cole. He articulated what I was feeling – what I couldn’t form into thought.

I cannot comprehend this much sorrow.

References: “We Can’t Comprehend This Much Sorrow” by Teju Cole for The New York Times (5-18-20). It is this article that alerted me to the author’s thoughtful writing. I have begun to read more of his work, the first being the novelette referred to in my blog: Every Day is for The Thief.

Categories // Reading Tags // boating, coffin, covid19, labyrinth, novel

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