Month: July 2008

  • Archive WWI COLOR photos

    Yesterday I discovered  WWIColorPhotos; my son and I were enthralled.  I took every moment I could snatch to look at the batches of photos.  On a host of levels, I find this fascinating. 

    Produced on glass plates, these autochrome pictures taken by the Lumière brothers are, according to today’s standards, primitive photos.  But, oh do they vivify my study of history!

    The light, the composition, the focus, little details – and ultimately, the subjects of this nascent art form mesmerize me.  I don’t mean to obsess about WWI, but I am learning so much about this period.  While the subject is atrocious, the sense of understanding and the ability to make connections backward and forward is fulfilling.

    About the pictures: they are part of the public domain.  I took them from the site, but they came originally from a French link called Gallica.  Pour yourself a cuppa and enjoy.  Passing your mouse over the picture will show you the title.

    I could frame this one.

    I’ve read that this destruction of the cathedral at Reims by the Germans
    incensed the entire world.  This is not Reims, but the cathedral at Soissons.
    Is it not painful to see the rubble?

    and my favorite:

  • Letters from Mom – Not Enough Time, Too Many Pounds

    Unwanted mice (our farmhouse was next door to a working farm), unwanted pounds (yeah – I have always envied my friends who lose weight breastfeeding), not excited about Thanksgiving and prayers.  But Danny remains the comic relief!  I know nothing what the reference to Hyde. Previous letters here.  And can anyone else appreciate being the only one who notices the improvement?

      .

    Thursday a.m.
    11-21-57

    Dearest John,

    I certainly am tardy in getting a letter off to you – something is always getting neglected.  I’ve been trying to get the housework in better shape than it has been in the past months, but in doing that I haven’t written a letter in weeks.  And while some of the work is done, no one but me can see any improvement.

    [...] Monday morning the mouse trap was gone – and we haven’t been able to locate it.  I hope the mouse got away from it.  So I set the other trap that I had and we have been getting a mouse a day.  It is getting disgusting to have so many of the animals around the place.  And flies too.  Having these pigs eating (and they are feeding them grain right on the cement by the house) right out here must be part of the reason.

    [...]  We told Danny that you were going on the toll road when you left on Sunday night.  So now when something is to be told he goes to the window and looks toward the toll road and we hear, “Daddy, Daddy, you on toll road.  Jimmy hit me, or Here’s some dessert for you, or today he decided Marvin was wearing your red winter hat.” [...] This morning he was playing with clay – fixed up a cake of it and put it in the skillet in the oven and told me he had a ‘burger in the oven!

    Carol should be waking up and it is time to fix some lunch for Jimmy.  So far this morning I haven’t earned my salt, but have eaten much more than that.  Unless I quit nursing the baby you folks are going to be way ahead of me in this losing weight business.  I have gained several pounds in spite of my efforts not to do so.  Hate to think what I’d weigh if I let myself go on eating now. [...]

    We’ll miss you this weekend, but it won’t be too long until Thanksgiving vacation.  I guess that we’ll be staying home here, although that doesn’t sound very exciting to me.  Sounds more like work, unless everyone would be satisfied with wieners.  But I suppose when the time comes we’ll get more enthusiastic.  We all do love you and are glad we can look forward to you coming home.  We’ll be praying for you this week end, but after reading about Hyde, I wonder if our prayers do much.  But we’ll keep on in our feeble way.

    Always yours,

    Nellie

  • Raspberries!

    What I know:  picking raspberries with my husband,
    popping a few choice morsels in my mouth,
    competing for the bigger take,
    talking as the light fades,
     is my idea of a romantic evening.

    What I’ve learned:  raspberries respond well to water. 
    The key to big berries is much, consistent water. 
    Thank you, son!

    100 Species:
    1.  Clematis
    2.  Garlic
    3.  Delphinium
    4.  Daylily
    5.  Dianthus
    6.  Daisy
    7.  Lobelia
    8.  Verbena
    9.  Cosmos
    10. Salvia
    11.  Diachondra
    12.  Raspberry

  • Great War Film Update


    [after opinion is asked--and received--about their orders, a subordinate asks Major Whittlesey]

    “Why are you here?”

    “Life would be a lot simpler if we could choose our duties and obligations.  But we can’t.  We shouldn’t.  That’s why I am here.”

    ~  Major Charles Whittlesey in the DVD Lost Battalion

    If graphic battle scenes don’t bother you, we highly recommend this DVD.  Rick Schroder’s performance is 10/10.  Based on a true story, this movie illustrates trench warfare.

     


    My son really liked this series.  This was the first live footage of the war that we saw: it was impressive.  The color wasn’t as big of a deal to me.  Kenneth Branagh did a good job of narration.  

    I appreciated the interviews with WWI veterans.   There were four or five octogenarians whose remarks were interspersed throughout the film.

    After reading Guns of August it was great to see more shots of the main players.    

    These eight one-hour programs have provided fodder for much discussion.  Yesterday my husband asked, “How do you think WWI would have ended if TR was president?”  

    We had never before heard of the Armenian Genocide.  

    Watching The Great War has been a great  though heavy companion to our reading.  Images are potent.  Reading about the horror is hard; seeing it in a soldier’s and children’s eyes, on the battlefield, in the ruined villages, is horrible.  The documentary utilizes archival footage and modern color images.  

     

  • Five Species in a Bucket

    Previous species:

    1.  Clematis
    2.  Garlic
    3.  Delphinium
    4.  Daylily
    5.  Dianthus
    6.  Daisy

    My daughter-in-law did it again.  This time she filled the wooden bucket from a broken ice cream maker with an arrangement of flowers.  Jessie drilled seven holes in the bottom of the wooden bucket (in case anyone else wants to re-use an old ice cream maker).  I saw a perfect opportunity for 100 Species.   With pen and paper in hand, I asked Jessie to identify each flower.  Typical of a born teacher, she challenged me to name the plants I knew first. 

    How many can you name?

    7.  Lobelia (blue flowers at bottom)  Named after Matthias Lobel, this plant has been used to treat asthma, food poisoning, and used to help stop smoking.  All I know is never, never, never skip a day watering lobelia!

    8.  Verbena (pink flowers on side and bottom)  Ha!  Verbena taught me a new word:  it is  a galactagogue.  A galactagogue is a substance to induce lactation.  Verbum means word in Latin.  That is how I plan to remember this plant.  See how unscientific I am?

    9.  Cosmos (orange in the middle)  Click here for a fun site full of information about Cosmos.  I learned that Cosmos produces “showy flowers in an orderly arrangement of cosmic proportions.”  The article claims they are the best annual for hot, dry conditions.  There you have it.  Cosmos.

    10.  Salvia (spiky purple plants on top)  Salvia is part of the sage family.  I was surprised when Jess told me this was salvia, because it was different from the salvia in my garden.  She took a petal from each flower and showed me the distinctive shape (see below).  Wikipedia: “The name Salvia derives from the Latin salvere, which means “to heal”.   Indeed this herb  is highly regarded for its healing qualities.  An ancient proverb states, “Why should a man die who has sage in his garden?”

    11.  Diachondra  (look at next picture for a close up)  Some have called this a “little weedy plant” — now I remember it!  I planted diachondra in my flower garden, and the little terriers tried to overtake any plant, regardless of size.  A good plant for hanging baskets. 


    Salvia petal

  • Car Talk

    “[yawn]…I wish [yawn] that I had [yawn] more stam [yawn] ina,” I murmured to my indefatigable husband.

    “If you lost some weight, you would get your wish,” replied my straightforward spouse.  “It’s just like the bushy tomatoes in the garden.  If they don’t get pruned soon, they are going to produce a few small tomatoes.  But if you cut back some of the extra shoots, you will be amazed at the fruit it bears.” 

    Wow. 

    What a perfect picture.  That’s my man: clarity and truth-telling with kindness.  It sounds so reasonable when he says it.

    Reflecting over the weekend, I also realized that I got dehydrated and that contributed to my sense of weariness. 

    It’s back to the basics:  pray, drink, move, give thanks, sleep.  All to the glory of God.

  • Useless Lumber

    This Saturday is the Annual Garage Sale at the home of our great Patriarch and Matriarch.  Last night Curt hauled tables and our first load of “stuff” over to his folks’ house.  We have two days left to explore more nooks and crannies for possible sale items before people start flocking around Saturday morning at 6:30 a.m.  Dad and Mom’s neighborhood join forces, with up to thirty families selling stuff in a few blocks.   All in all, this weekend is a great source of encouragement and thankfulness. 

    Garage sales are the great astringent of life.

    They make me thankful for:

    •   The incremental nature of annual cleaning.  If you never go through your stuff until you are almost dead, the overwhelming task would finish you off.  Each year we imagine we won’t find anything to sell after our thorough pruning a year prior.  We are either self-deceived (i.e. we didn’t clean as well as we thought) or our tastes and passions have changed (e.g. little bunny decorative items now fail to make us sigh with pleasure) or an item has served its useful life in our family (porta potty – don’t ask).  Here is the best part:  it gets easier every year.  One sees progress. That itself is a huge encouragement.

    •    Because it is an annual project, you can focus on different areas in different years.  This year, my husband went into the attic.  Ayup.  I need to go through the linen closet and our CD collection.  The point is that you don’t have to do every thing every year.  Lord willing, and the creek don’t rise, we’ll do it again this time next year. 

    •    The feeling of buoyancy that comes with letting go.  It is not quite as good as losing twenty pounds, but a close second. 

    •    The sense of martyrdom and sacrifice.  One needs a brave and stolid heart.  My great relinquishment this year is two boxes of empty canning jars, which reduces my collection of empty canning jars from 120 to 104.  I remember with fondness a time with three hungry boys when those jars were full of applesauce, salsa, peaches and grape juice.  I worry about selling the empty jars, lest my sons forget the former glory days of their martyred mother. 

    •    A renewed love and respect for my folks, the ones who gave me my husband.  They love the beauty of a clean and ordered life; I keep hoping if I stand close to them it will rub off on me.  Their example constantly inspires me, but on these weekends my love for them surges. 

    While I surveyed my house for potential sale items last night, I listened to this delightful piece from Three Men in a Boat.


    George said, “You know, we are on a wrong track altogether.  We must not think of the things we could do with, only of the things we can’t do without.”


    George comes out really quite sensible at times.  You’d be surprised.  I call that downright wisdom, not merely as regards the present case, but with reference to our trip up the river of life generally.  How many people on that voyage load up the boat ‘til it is ever in danger of swamping with a store of foolish things which they think is central to the pleasure and comfort of the trip, but which are only really useless lumber?


    How they pile the poor little craft mast high with fine clothes and big houses, with useless servants and a host of swell friends that do not care a tuppance for them, and that they do not care three ha’pennies for. [with…, with…, with…]

     

    It is lumber, man, all lumber.  Throw it overboard!  It makes the boat so heavy to pull you nearly faint at the oars.  It makes it so cumbersome and dangerous to manage, you never know a moment’s freedom from anxiety and care, never gain a moment’s rest for dreamy laziness – no time to watch the windy shadows skimming lightly o’er the shallows, or the glittering sunbeams flitting in and out among the ripples, or the great trees by the margin looking down at their own image, or the woods all green and golden, or the lilies white and yellow, or the somber-waving rushes, or the sedges, or the orchids, or the blue forget-me-nots.


    Throw the lumber over, man!  Let your boat of life be light, packed with only what you need – a homely home and simple pleasures, one or two friends, worth the name, someone to love and someone to love you, a cat, a dog, and a pipe or two, enough to eat and enough to wear, and a little more than enough to drink; for thirst is a dangerous thing.

                                        ~ Jerome K. Jerome

  • 100 Species – “D” Plants

    1.  Clematis
    2.  Garlic
    3.  Delphinium

    Hey, howdy!  I didn’t know that larkspur is the common name for delphinium!  The flower has five petals which grow together to form a hollow flower with a spur at the end.  My neighbor (a Master Gardener) looks with envy at these beautiful blue flowers.  She says she can’t grow them.  Aw, shucks.  I found the answer to my biggest problem – they get heavy and droop, all bent over -  in a novel, of all places.  An older gentleman in England put in a stake and tied up the delphinium.  I guess that’s what you are supposed to do.

    4.  Daylily

    The things you learn!  They are called daylilies because the flower opens at sunrise and withers at sunset, possibly replaced by another blossom on the same stem the next day.  How could I test this, besides sitting next to the plant looking at it the entire day?  The flowers are edible!  Used in Chinese cuisine.  Well.  I like the greenery.  I think I need to dig and divide my plants this fall.

    5.  Dianthus

     

    Common names are Carnation, Pink, and Sweet William.   Do you know how clearer my mental pictures will be when I read about Sweet William in a book?   This is one of the oldest plants in my flower garden. 

    6.  Daisy

    I don’t know what kind of daisies these are and I’ve run out of time to find out.  Yikes!
    What I do know – and doesn’t everyone? – is that the word daisy comes from “day’s eye” because the daisies closed up at night and opened in the daylight.  I just learned in a fly-by reading that daisies are the symbol of innocence.  Do y’all see why I didn’t do so well in the sciences?  Sigh.

  • Letters From Mom – Father Hunger

    Previous letters here.  Seven children, aged eleven to newborn, with her husband away teaching college.  Sick kids, washing machine still causing trouble, rats, mice, wind…and she finds time to read.  That’s my mom! 

    Thursday evening, 10-??-57

    Dear John,

    Tonight when Danny [3 years old] was going to bed he was sobbing on the bed in the living room – I’ve never heard him sound so broken hearted.  I gathered him up and he told me, “I want my Daddy” over and over again.  He is feeling so punk and has been my little shadow for a couple of days, but tonight it was just too much.  I would have spent the money on phone call if I was sure it would have helped just to let him hear you.  With some loving from me and Carol [3 weeks] he settled off to sleep.  He is not so sick, but enough to be miserable.  [...]

    Carol has been good but wanting to eat about every three hours and hardly staying awake long enough to eat; on a chance that perhaps she wasn’t getting enough I tried giving her some formula tonight – but she would hardly take any.  She may have a light case of the flu now. [...]

    We have had another rat and two mice die since you left — and by the noises around we still have some more.

    A lot of wind last night.  I’d forgotten how drafty the house is.

    Been reading A. Whyte.  Also some of E. Stanley Jones.  Must say that I find Whyte much the more stimulating.  “Mastery” may be good — but I don’t always get the point.  His magazine just came – you’ll enjoy it this month.  Article about Ken Pike and two articles about non-professional missionaries that I enjoyed.

    Must close for now.  I do love you and like Danny I often would like to give up because “I want you”.  But because of you I take heart and strive to do a good job here.  Take care of yourself and hurry home next week-end. 

    All my love,

    Nellie

  • Babyville

    All right, I’ll just stick my oar in the water and do a little splashing:

    I love the little sounds that babies make in the church service.

    I know, at times they are big sounds, long, whiny, distracting sounds – and it is appropriate and necessary to take the dear one out of the service.  But.  The little gurgles, the slurps, the oohs and gentle vocalizing…I love them all.  They are sounds of life. 

    Spare me from a church sanctuary which is sanitized of all noise (welcome and unwelcome) from children under the age of eight, from a reader board with numbers flashing to inform a mom that her child (# 241) is pitching a fit. The thought makes me shudder.

    Jesus said, “Let the little children come to me and do not hinder them.” 

    I think other cultures have so much to teach Americans.  We tend to get prissy about anything that we can’t control, and it is evident that a newborn baby sits squarely in that category.  It is time to relax.  Smile.  Take a breath.  Refrain from turning around and glaring.  Find ways to encourage young parents.  Enjoy their babies.

    It is Babyville at our church.  On Sunday I held two newborn girls, Summer and Mercy; the only reason it wasn’t three was because Abigail was sound asleep.  Our small church (~ 100 regulars) is bursting with babies and toddlers.  And we love ‘em.  Come and welcome.  We have a room to the side for crying babies, but they usually start the service with us.  Moms and Dads have help from singles and stand-in grandmas.  There is no doubt that it takes work to train a child to sit quietly.  But the paybacks are sweet.   Sweet and glorious.

    Addendum:  Nancy Wilson, this week, on the same subject.