Tuesday, December 3, 2013

For I Will Consider My Cat Jeoffry

Last week our beloved cat, "S'more" died.  She was a pretty white calico who liked to snuggle with you and tickle her whiskers in your face.  Henry took it pretty hard and we spent most of Tuesday crying together.  It's amazing how those furry little creatures get into your heart.  I know I'm not the only one who considers them part of the family.


Christopher Smart
illustrated by Emily Arnold McCully 1984

This poem was written by Christopher Smart in 1757 extolling his cat, Jeoffry.  The biographical information about Smart at the front of the book is quite interesting.  He wrote humorous and sacred verse but ended up in the madhouse (where this poem was written).  He became fervently religious and was praying in the streets, but there is speculation as to why he really was committed to an asylum.

The poem comes from Jubilate Agno.  He writes lovingly of his cat Jeoffry (his only companion in the asylum) and the spiritual, God-loving nature of the animal.  The illustrator Emily Arnold McCully writes this:  "Smart wrote both masterpieces in the madhouse, celebrating God's goodness in all nature.  He never doubted that he was saved, nor that Jeoffry, pure in all his motions, was saved too."

The text can be awkward to read, it is 18th century poetry after all,  but the pictures make it fun to follow and well worth it.









Saturday, November 9, 2013

Herbert the Lion

Sometimes we find the best treasures at the thrift shop!  Let's face it, most thrift stores- especially the unorganized ones- have a lot of mediocre books to sift through.  Up on the display case, behind some vintage Sesame Street alphabet books and a bunch of cheap Barbie paperbacks, I spotted "Herbert".  Obviously a reprint from a 1931 original, the creamy yellow dust jacket and large over-sized shape looked brand new.

We've read it dozens of times since I brought it home 2 days ago!  The color palate is just yellow, white and that distinctive vintage blue/green that Martha Stewart has made so popular.  Clare Turlay Newberry drew the most adorable lion and his Shirley Temple look alike owner/friend.    Needless to say I'm thrilled with this new find!

(Because of the size of the book I had to photograph it instead of scan it in, so the color quality isn't the best).

Clare Turlay Newberry 1998














Thursday, October 31, 2013

Happy Hallowe'en!


Hallowe'en

Bolt and bar the front door,
Draw the curtains tight;
Wise folk are in before
Moon-rise to-night.

Hallowe'en, Hallowe'en,
Chestnuts to roast, 
A gift for the fairy,
A prayer for the ghost.

Who will have their fate told,
This night is known,
Whose hand is full of gold,
Who goes alone.

Hallowe'en, Hallowe'en,
Snapdragon blue,
A lover for me
And a fortune for you

Stars shiver blue and green,
Moon's wide and white;
There, tattered clouds between,
Witches take flight.

Hallowe'en, Hallowe'en,
Apples a-bob,
Elves at the key-hole
And imps on the hob.

"Twelve," calls the deep bell
To the hollow night.
"Twelve," whisper steeple tops
Far out of sight.

Hallowe'en, Hallowe'en,
Fires burn high.
Who shall say certainly,
Who can tell truthfully,
What solemn company
Passes through the sky?

-Molly Capes

Friday, October 18, 2013

Kickstarter- Take Your Time Loving Me

That was motherhood, thought the squire, snipping at the stalks.  Casual encounters about the garden and the house, with those on happy, secret errands.  Glint in the eye, indication of a destination, feet running, a voice calling, a group loose-knit and close-knit, running at the end of faint elastic ropes, but tied still to her navel.  

That was part of motherhood.  Other landscapes to come, unseen, the blocked, silent future that made her wince.  Ah, if she could carry this bundle of children with her into eternity, clutched to her breast, with iron arms like God's.  "But the navel strings will wear fine and break and each will go out to found its family and sow it's seed."  What is personality, where does it go?  So childish, so fundamental, so useless, so wild a question.

In Enid Bagnold's "The Squire" (my very favorite book), she writes of motherhood, birth, life, children, identity, mortality.  She muses on her changing self and her growing children.

How short a time ago was it that she had cried, "My life!  My life!  stretching her arms and her young body, fierce, alone, adventurous, - and now a mother five times!

Life was no longer altogether hers, the body already a little threadbare, worn in indescribable yet noted ways.  Since these essential acts of birth had occurred she knew that there was something in which she now aquiesced, a calm, a stoic pleasure in procession.  "To give birth, to bring up the young, to die" thought the squire, and for the first time saw her own end as endurable.  "I was solid and I was myself.  But now I am a pipe through which the generations pass."

Recently a project has been stirring with my dear friend, Margaux- an artist, and mother.  We've often talked about it over coffee at my kitchen table- what this life of motherhood means, how it feels to watch the time pass through your children, how your heart swells and breaks, and bursts with love for them.  How you are no longer the "you" you thought you were, the changes that are unavoidable.  For Margaux this reconciling will take place through a multifaceted project she is funding through Kickstarter, "Take Your Time Loving Me."


I see her project as two parts that are threaded together:  how being a mother is changing her- her life no longer being made of solitary travel and exploration (as it was when I first met her), but now an adventure of a different sort.    And with all things, that sharp twinge of the passage of time, the clutch of your throat when you realize your children are growing up.  I've mentioned it before (see Roxaboxen, Someday, How Does It Feel to be Old) but I wonder do we ever get over that feeling?  Even my husband, who is hardly the emotional, self-reflective type, will get melancholy when he realizes how our teenagers are reaching closer to adulthood and sliding away from being children.  When you become a parent time starts to pass at break-neck speed!  Years ago at my father-in-law's retirement party, his 90 year old mother was there and I couldn't help but imagine what it would be like to see your son grown, retired, and with grandchildren of his own.    

Please consider supporting Margaux's project as she fleshes out these thoughts and experiences.  She has made some beautiful donation rewards that capture the sentiments of her project. 

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Twig


Elizabeth Orton Jones 
 
This was our bedtime reading chapter book all summer long.  I could tell Charlotte liked it when she asked if we could read more about "Stick" (!).

The writing at times feels very vintage but the story is cute.  A little girl named "Twig" shrinks down in size and befriends an elf.  She sets up house for them in an old can though elf proves to be a mischievous fellow.  They take turns watching Mrs. Sparrow's eggs and meet the Fairy Queen (who wears an adorable caterpillar as a "fur" around her neck).  These kinds of chapter books seem to be hard to come by today.  The stories are simple but well-written, the characters are sweet and innocent but still interesting.  It's nice to be able to read something wholesome to your kids at bedtime.








Tuesday, October 1, 2013

The Day the Crayons Quit

Silly/funny books are always a big hit in my house (especially with Charlotte and Henry).  This one cracks us up.  All the crayons in the crayon box have written letters to Duncan, voicing their discontent.  Blue and Grey crayon are tired of coloring so much, Pink would like to be used more often for things like dinosaurs and cowboys, and Yellow and Orange are fighting over who should color the sun.  The funniest letter is from Peach crayon who has had his wrapper stripped off and doesn't appreciate being naked in the crayon box!  Oliver Jeffers' illustrations once again combine drawing and real life objects in a neat way.


Drew Daywalt
illustrated by Oliver Jeffers 2013









Other books illustrated by Oliver Jeffers:

Friday, September 27, 2013

Rabbits' Search for a Little House

The mornings have been colder and darker but the sun is like a golden gleam and the air makes your lungs sing!  This is the season I love the most!

I must have read this book as an elementary student because the pictures and story looked awfully familiar.  Especially the cozy house at the end.  And anyone that knows me knows that I have a 'thing' for cozy houses.

Mary DeBall Kwitz
pictures by Lorinda Cauley 1977

Rabbit and her child are searching for a new home before the start of winter.  Unfortunately the cute mushroom house has already been sold to Toad, the Hotel Mole Hole has no vacancy, and mean Shrew is prejudiced against rabbits.  No matter, the rabbits are resourceful and make their own snug home.