Cloud Castles

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Land of Enchantment, Norman Rockwell

The Land of Enchantment, Norman Rockwell

If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them.

Henry David Thoreau

I have always been a dreamer. When I was a child in school I was constantly being called down in class for staring out of the window, chin in hand. When I would read a book, I lived in it–I literally walked with Anne Shirley through all her chagrin over red hair and geometry and Gilbert, and I nestled in the dim, light-filtered shadows of Marmee’s attic while Jo March spun her fantastic tales. When I was in junior high I was the one at the back of the room industriously scribbling out stories in the back of my algebra notebook and doubtless leaving my teachers mystified as to how so conscientious a student could perform so poorly on math tests.

And when I was given the life-changing opportunity of an idyllic (and I really do mean idyllic, thanks be to God) home education experience, something wild and sweet and joyous suddenly broke free within me and my fledgling soul soared skyward without the least inhibition or impediment, darting blissfully from one literary feast to another and back again in a glad spree of abundance. I could scarcely alight for long in those early days–the banquet was too rich and varied and my freedom too fresh not to soar and hover and settle and flit again as my fancy took me. In time I sobered down a bit, much to my mother’s relief, no doubt. But never, as long as I live, will I ever forget those ‘first, fine, careless raptures’, or the bright ideals and dreams that sprang from them. They have left their permanent mark upon my soul, one of the outward evidences of which is the stacks of books I find myself surrounded with to this very day. Creeping in at my desk on both sides, toppling my three-legged bedside table, accompanying me from room to room (and from continent to continent, as the case may be, to which the outlandish temporary ‘library’ I set up in England last fall will attest!).

I am deeply grateful to God for the wise friends that He has blessed me with in the way of books. Their dreams have validated mine again and again–dreams once thought so secret and solitary–and have given me a substance upon which to build a few cloud castles of my own. Their truths have affirmed to me the value of pain, ever couched in the goodness of God. And their witness has ever been one of a beauty that yearns and lures and breaks the heart with a loving stab of eternal reality. Elizabeth Goudge, George Eliot, Sheldon Vanauken, Elizabeth Gaskell, J.R.R. Tolkien, Gerard Manley Hopkins–and so many other trusted ones!–have taken up the threads that Louisa May Alcott and Lucy Maud Montgomery began to weave so long ago, fitting their silken strands into the tapestry of my life and helping me to write my own story. There are times that I know a certain book or poem or line has been divinely chosen for me, hand-picked and illumined by God for a particular challenge or season of life, and few things compare to the sense exhilaration that accompanies. There are books that my husband and I have read together and have fallen more in love with God and life over. And there are others through which I have traveled with surprising  joy at the recommendation or in the company of true kindred spirits. All dear–all gifts from Him who gives without stint and without ceasing.

I find as I grow older that I have more dreams–not less. And the end towards which all this rambling leads is that I have dreams for this humble little corner of the web. With all my heart I wish it to be a place of peace and beauty, “simplicity and contentment in a greedy and tired culture”, a haven from complaints and complaining. I want fellow dreamers to find themselves in good company, no matter how huge and howling the world may seem at times. I want the precious battered ones whose dreams have taken a beating to know that there is hope unimaginable in the blessed Person of Jesus Christ. I want to encourage the artist that lives within each one of us to take up the call to which we have been uniquely designed and to rejoice as children in the glory of God that results.

And I long to share the joys of a truly beautiful book–inside and out–and to make introductions between those readers and writers who just ought to be friends. (And I’m dreaming, somehow, of actually getting them into your hands, as the opportunity arises.) That is what I want to do here–that is what this site is about. And if you’re kind enough to be reading, I just thought you should know.

Speaking of your kindness, I would like to close with a profound thank you for all the lovely and generous comments that have been left over the past few months on my ‘return’ to Lanier’s Books. I really cannot tell you how you have inspired and blessed me with your encouragement. Madeleine L’Engle said, profoundly, that “art is communication”, and it just heartens me beyond words to know that I am not writing into a void. (Not that comments are required by any means or that my vanity needs stroking! ;) But I was rather loathe to publish over those months that my comment form was broken, simply because I felt like I was talking to myself! ;) ) At any rate, thank you for reading and for taking the time to tell me. It has meant so much.

For this I bless you most: You give much and know not that you give at all.

Kahlil Gibran

Land of Enchantment, Norman Rockwell, 1934

Land of Enchantment, Norman Rockwell, 1934

About Me

Monday, November 7th, 2005

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When I was eight years old I discovered an old typewriter in my parents’ storage house, which I hauled out and set up on my blue and white desk and promptly began work on the next Great American Novel. (Don’t look for it in the stores—it was replaced by a historical epic set in the colonial West Indies. And that one eventually gave way to the inevitable Gothic romance complete with indecipherable Scottish dialect…) I’ve literally been writing ever since, though I’ve upgraded to a laptop (and, no, I don’t type much better than I did when I was eight) and traded in (most of) my ‘high-faluting mumbo jumbo’ for a rapturous chronicle of the Beauty and Truth and Goodness of the God of my life.

I’m a recovering perfectionist, an erstwhile teacher of classical ballet and a devotee of Very Long Walks, especially with my four-legged son, Caspian, at my heels (or dragging me along by his leash, whichever way you prefer to envision it). I adore English literature, English tea, English soil. I collect memories and Southern sayings and old books and cats and things for my hair that don’t do what they say they will do. Vintage clothing is one of my vices, as is a tendency to worry first and ask questions later.

In 1999 I married my beloved Philip, and we’ve been living out our dreams ever since in an 1850’s farmhouse in the beautiful state of Georgia, ‘content to be in Christ together’. At last count our continually-expanding family included three dogs, seven cats, two Nubian goat kids, seven lambs, twenty-one hens, a mad rooster, and a fish named Horatio. If you don’t find me around here I’m probably busy in the barn or the garden. Or having tea in the back yard with my husband. Or out tramping somewhere in our 1962 Airstream.

Or scribbling madly, in pursuit of that perfect word.

Under the Mercy,
Lanier

Dedication

Friday, November 4th, 2005

After Jesus and Philip, books are the great passion of my life. Not just any books, mind you. I’m very particular on this point. While, admittedly,there are some upstarts that rank themselves among my friends, it’s the old books that have my heart. And it’s mainly in praise of them–and in memory of the woman that introduced me to so many of them and infused the word ‘antiquarian’ with magic–that I offer this site.

obc

Chief Among Desires

Thursday, May 26th, 2005

“For wisdom is more precious than rubies,
and nothing you desire can compare with her.”
Proverbs 8:11

When I was fourteen, God turned my world upside down-or, more accurately, set it right side up. My parents had become Christians a couple of years before, and the devotion and zeal with which they approached their new-found faith had had a marked influence on me. I had started to take my own walk a little more seriously, spending time almost daily reading my Bible and praying at times for things I wanted very badly, paltry trifles though they were. But, for the most part, I went about my merry way, which really wasn’t all that merry, truth be told, making little, if any, application of the things I had read in the Bible, and making my own personal happiness the very business of my life.

Chief among the desires that I cherished was a passionate yearning for popularity, and the high road to that glittering god of adolescence was, I believed, a spot on the cheerleading squad. From the first day of middle school it was painfully obvious that I didn’t fit in. I still wore the trim little plaid woolen jumpers, crisp oxford shirts, and penny loafers that my mother had dressed me in since elementary school (three long months ago!) and wore my hair long and pulled away from my face with satin ribbons. All of the other girls wore make-up and big earrings and tight-fitting clothes; but it wasn’t until I turned around in class one day and caught one of my best friends making fun of my ribbon-bound braid that a reckless determination arose within me to be just like the rest of them, whatever the cost. That was the beginning of a dark period of opalescent lip-stick and teased hair, and cheap, ill-fitting garments that stuck gracelessly to my thin little-girl frame.

My appearance was not the only sacrifice that I made to this shining idol. There were others, more subtle, perhaps, but more dangerous, laced as they were with the sly cunning of self-deceit. With every ‘little’ choice I made, every coarse joke I laughed at, every true desire that I shamed into conformity, I grew more and more distant from myself-and from my God. I was eleven years old then, and daily in contact with girls who whispered of smoking and ‘making-out’ with boys; but as that year passed, I learned to listen to their chatter without the slightest sensation of the wide-eyed shock that had characterized my early days in junior high. No amount of conformity, however, could change the fact that this shy, slightly awkward little girl-who had felt the ache of beauty in her soul and had heard the call of God-would never fit in, unless she put her own nature to death.

Nevertheless, I was resolved to be a cheerleader or perish in the attempt. If hard work could win a spot on the squad, then it should be mine. I could hardly wait until the end of seventh grade when I could try out. In the end, I was chosen for the team-with much different results than I had anticipated. In being selected, I had inadvertently bumped one of the ‘in’ girls off of the squad, and thus invoked the wrath of her whole set. It was a dreadful, painful, self-conscious year of petty slights, ill-concealed ridicule, and open scorn. Of all the cruelties of nature, few can surpass those of teenage girls. I had some pluck, though, if I do say so myself, even if it was misplaced. With all that I endured that tedious year, I was ready, even eager, to try out for the high school squad. It would be different in high school; I would get another chance to find my niche in the popular crowd. After all, there was no other choice. What joy could life possibly hold if I continued to be relegated to that wistful host outside of the charmed circle?

During this period, unbeknownst to me, my parents were weighing a very serious question. At nothing less than God’s initiative, they had begun to investigate a new and rather radical method of education called home-schooling. By January of that year, I was aware that it was a very real possibility for Elizabeth and Zach, my younger sister and brother, but it never entered my mind that they could be considering it for me. Apparently, it hadn’t entered Daddy’s mind, either, for when Mama pointed out to him an algebra book in a catalogue that she thought might do for me, he was taken aback.

“Now, wait a minute-I think that this will be great for Elizabeth and Zach, but not for Lanier. She’s going into high school.    How can we expect to teach her all of the subjects that she’ll need?”

Mama stared at him for a moment, too dismayed to speak.

“Honey, you don’t understand!” she said desperately. “It won’t work. It’s got to be all of us, or it won’t work! Otherwise it        will pull our family apart rather than build it up. Lanier has got to be a part of this, too.” I’m sure that Mama’s own conviction that they were losing me lent weight to her words. “I honestly don’t know how we’re going to tackle all of those high school subjects, but I am convinced that if God is calling our family to this, then He will show us the way.”

She wisely said no more on the matter, at least to Daddy. To be sure, she said a great deal to God about it over the ensuing months, and God, in turn, began to speak to Daddy. By the end of the school year, he was as good as convinced, and the decision had all but been made, when a trivial incident became the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back. One afternoon, he turned up at my school, intending to surprise me by attending the pep rally scheduled for that day. No father that ever lived could be more proud of his children or more supportive of their efforts and interests than mine. He rewarded every hard-earned achievement with such a liberality of praise and affirmation that the actual attainment of the goal paled in the light of his smiling approbation. All three of us knew the joy of that smile; under its influence our best efforts ever flourished.

His displeasure can be imagined, then, when he entered the gym to find the other cheerleaders mid-way through their little display, and me, watching them alone from a bench on the sidelines. I felt so awkward and stupid there by myself, in front of the whole school, as it were-but at the sight of my Daddy’s figure in the doorway, I smiled in spite of myself. Mortification fled before the indomitable comfort of his presence. I was not alone.

In a moment he was beside me with his arm around me whispering, “What’s going on?” I whispered back that the girls had decided among themselves that I wasn’t ‘ready’ to perform the routine, and had put the alternate in my place moments before the pep rally began. My own stinging sense of injustice melted into his as he sat there for a moment with his mouth set in a firm line.

“Let’s go,” he finally said, rising abruptly and taking my hand.

I remember driving away with him, a happy sense of freedom rising within me. I felt wildly, as I had many times before, that I never wanted to come back to that hated place. I did hate it, with all of my scramblings and schemings for its elusive bounty of popularity-or, perhaps because of them. I never knew any real happiness there; and when I was honest with myself I knew that the one place on earth that gave me the kind of security and joy that I was searching for was my own home among the people who loved me for exactly who I was.

But I was going there now-with Daddy. It was Friday afternoon, and a whole weekend stretched between now and the grey Monday when my parole would be up and I would have to return to prison. Daddy probably bought me a milkshake on the way home. I don’t remember exactly, but it was just the kind of thing that he would do. And we came in the door laughing, leaving the cruel world and its insults and hostility outside.

Not long after this incident, a family counsel was called, and the three of us made our way to the den with vague forebodings. I had known something was in the air. Like the distant rumble of an approaching thunderstorm, snatches of overheard conversations and catalogues left open on the dining room table had heralded the coming disaster. But even I was stunned when the storm finally broke-for it broke with such force and finality that all of my hastily erected arguments and alternatives were swept away before I knew what was happening.

We all sat open-mouthed as my parents related the plan for the coming year. There was such a curious mixture of excitement and firmness in their voices as they told us how God had led them to embark on this strange adventure called home-schooling, and I knew that an unwilling protest or an insolent remark would be worse than fruitless. So I tried another tack.

“What if we don’t want to?” I wheedled. “I mean, what if we would rather go to Christian school, or something?” I could still be a cheerleader there, if I had to.

Daddy’s smile vanished. He lowered his eyebrows and looked at me with that steady, searching gaze that always made me squirm, and which, I imagined, could have wrung a confession from the most hardened of criminals before his bench.

“Ah, sweetie,” he said, without taking his eyes from my face. It should be expressed that in our house, ‘ sweetie ‘ was not a term of endearment, and when prefaced with a calculated ‘ ah ‘, one knew, unmistakably, that one had erred. “I’m afraid that you don’t understand. We’re not giving you a choice. This is what God has led us to do with our family, and your Mama and I are committed to seeing it through.”

I stared at the floor and bit my lip in frustration and anger. Home-schooling ? Were they crazy ? I had never even heard of it before they had started whispering about it last fall. Maybe it wasn’t even legal! Hope glimmered faintly for a moment and then faded. Daddy would surely have looked into that. Oh, this was terrible! Did they even care that I was going to have absolutely no friends now?

I stole a look at my younger sister, Elizabeth. She was sitting in stony silence, with her little mouth set very much like Daddy’s could be. She was three years younger than me, and my opposite in many ways-a passionate student, and the sun around which her fellow fourth-graders revolved. I knew that she was stricken to the core, but she would save her tears for the solitude of her own bedroom.

Zach, on the other hand, was the very essence of enthusiasm. Despite the difference in our ages, I suspect that we shared the same distaste for traditional schooling, and it was an unspoken, even unobserved bond between us. While I had been reprimanded by teachers for daydreaming in math class and drawing crude sketches of princesses in my social studies notebook, Zach’s trouble had manifested itself in a general rambuctiousness-perfectly normal in a boy his age-which had occasioned several notes home and conferences with annoyed teachers. What Zach really needed was exactly what he was about to get: a sound education with enough freedom and sunshine interspersed with spelling tests and multiplication tables to satisfy the inherent longings of a healthy, robust boyhood.

“Won’t it be wonderful?” Mama was saying. “On cold mornings we can do our lessons in here by the fire-”

“With hot chocolate?” demanded Zach, as if it were one of the terms of a contract.

“Yes, of course!” Mama laughed. If Elizabeth and my sullen countenances troubled her, she didn’t let on. She seized upon Zach’s interest and talked as if we were all wildly excited. “Think of the books we can read together-and the field trips!”

Zach accepted it all with the enviable abandon of an eight year old, and went his way with a light heart that summer. Elizabeth and I were not convinced, however, and I have every reason to suspect that she cried herself to sleep at night for weeks. I tried to be hopeful: they would get tired of it, or it would be too hard, and then they would come to their senses. I even pictured myself trying out clandestinely for the junior varsity cheerleading squad the following spring-I could see the surprised but proud looks on their faces as I told them that I had made the team, and could hear their vanquished concession to my all-important happiness. How could they resist? For you see, I was still quagmired in the state of believing that my happiness was the main objective in everything-I, who didn’t even yet know what true happiness was!

It is with some shame that I confess that I left my friends in school with a very dubious idea of what I was doing in the next school year. If they happened to cherish the notion that I was going to a private school ( very private!), I didn’t see any necessity in disillusioning them. The only one that I discussed it with was my best friend.

“It’s only for a year at the most,” I told her. “I’ll be back in tenth grade.”

“I think that your parents are crazy,” she replied.

“I do too,” I muttered.

The courage of my mother and father cannot be underestimated. Relatively new Christians, they had embraced obedience with an uncommon devotion; and if this new life led them into uncharted territory, it was with a steady eye of faith that they scanned the horizon. To be sure, there wasn’t much to be seen, even from that hilltop of satisfied obedience, for the homeschooling movement was still in its early stages, and there were few provisions and little company in the land that stretched before them. I couldn’t help but notice that virtually the whole of our town thought them insane. This had caused a genuine uproar. Heaven only knows how many curious comments Mama smiled graciously at over her grocery cart, or how many well-meaning cautions from baffled colleagues Daddy laughingly brushed aside.

Even their closest friends were skeptical. Their pastor tried to talk them out of it. My loving and godly grandmother had dire forebodings: “You won’t make it a year,” she told them grimly. But to me, in retrospect, the most admirable facet of their courage lay in not being afraid of their own children. Our resistance did not deter them in the least. In not giving us a choice in the matter they did the very best thing possible. My parents did not allow us to presume that we knew what was best for ourselves, and in so doing, taught us all a great lesson about the wise and loving dealings of God with His children.


So that was how it all began; and thus, with my arms folded and a sullen look in my eye, I embarked on a golden pilgrimage.

If the first step was taken grudgingly, even against my will, then all the more credit goes to God for nudging me and tugging me into the path where my joy was to be found. My first impulse had been to ‘lay low’, and by feigned compliance, store up my parents’ favor for the time that I should really need it the following spring, when I would launch a full-blown campaign to be put back in school. And so I was docile enough on that bright September morning as we all sat around in the den, hands folded over crisp new workbooks, faces turned expectantly towards Mama. How overwhelmed she must have been at that moment! And how bravely she lifted her head and smiled back at us, the cheerfulness in her voice masking any fear she may have felt.

“Let’s just begin with a prayer and thank God for this wonderful opportunity that He has given us,” she said with shining eyes.

I am sure that, even as committed as they were, Mama and Daddy scarcely imagined the vastness of what they had undertaken. What valor and faith would be required of them! And yet, if they ever were weary and burdened-and I know that they had to have been at times-we were never, never made to feel that it was directed towards us. I never heard the slightest word of complaint from my mother over the sacrifices she had made to educate us at home. But neither do the noblest soldiers show off their battle scars or seek sympathy for the privations of camp life. There were skirmishes and struggles, to be sure, but my parents cried out to God in the midst of them, and found that they were not worthy to be compared with the blessings and benefits of the life that they had been called to. Mama and Daddy had disentangled themselves from anything that would hinder obedience, and Elizabeth, Zach and I were the ones who were blessed for it.

Hardly a week had passed before I had to admit to myself that it really wasn’t as bad as I had feared. There was, in fact, a new little happiness welling up within me that was both mystifying and delightful. Mystifying, because it had finally begun to come to me when I had stopped grappling for it; delightful because it was sweeter than I had ever suspected. The change that came about in my attitude-truly, within a matter of days-was such that it can barely be traced; so natural and easy was it that I didn’t even realize that it was happening. Suffice it to say that at the beginning of that first week I was inwardly defiant, and that by its end I was more satisfied than I had ever been in my life. Gone were the strivings for approval, the endless agitation of insecurity, the wearisome business of conformity.

It was in those early days of sweet content that one of the greatest blessings of this bright new journey came to me, namely, my friendship with my sister. Looking back over all the joy that those years held for me, it is striking to see how inherent a part of it all she was. I have been extraordinarily blessed in friendship, and agree most heartily with Helen Keller that “my friends have made the story of my life”; but within that sacred little circle of influence there is no friend who has loved me more truly or understood me more perfectly than Elizabeth . One of the first times that I ever experienced that sympathetic illumination that ever characterizes great poetry was upon reading Christina Rosetti’s fantastically beautiful ‘Goblin Market’-when I came to the final stanza, my heart leapt up in recognition:

For there is no friend like a sister
In calm or stormy weather;
To cheer one on the tedious way,
To fetch one if one goes astray,
To lift one if one totters down,
To strengthen whilst one stands

Indeed, there is no friend like a sister, for the dividing of sorrows and the sharing of the burden of joy; for the unblinking cognization of all one’s weaknesses and the unstinting appreciation of one’s leanings towards strength; for reproof, praise, consolation each in their proper hour. Each soul needs another soul to understand it completely, to comprehend perhaps better than they do themselves the meaning and matter of their personality. Someone that you don’t have to explain things to-this is a blessing indeed. And who better than she of one’s own blood, who carries within herself the traits of a shared lineage?

My friendship with my sister was, and is, in its purest sense, the simple complexity of counterpoint: a combination of two related, independent melodies into a single harmonic texture in which each retains its linear character. ‘Two independent melodies’; yet incomplete without the other. Complimentary strains flowing side by side in the perfection of opposites united, brief dissensions resolved into but sweeter harmony. That ‘harmonic texture’ has been for me one of the loveliest songs I have ever known.

We reveled in freedom and friendship that autumn. On the crisp, sparkling days of September and October, we often packed up our lunches and our books and headed down the street to Mrs. Smith’s at the bottom of the hill, whose wooded sanctuary of a yard we were most welcome to picnic and play in. We would spread our blanket by the happy little brown creek, among ferns and jewelweed and mistflowers, and give ourselves over to the pleasures that the day so graciously offered us. Already the idea of school cafeterias and long grey hallways was so remote it would have seemed utterly foreign had we even remembered it. But that was more than another life for me, it was another person altogether. This girl here, sitting in the gold September sunshine, laughing as merrily as the stream that chuckled by, reading poetry out loud merely because it was beautiful and she was beginning to understand it, this was who I was meant to be.

We gradually learned to laugh at the ubiquitous ’socialization’ question. How abundantly the Lord replaced my previous strivings with true friendships that flowered effortlessly within a moments’ recognition of a kindred soul! His goodness in this area has been almost heart-breakingly sweet. He gave me a lively band of like-minded friends with whom I made some of the happiest memories of my youth. And He sent alongside me a smaller, but infinitely dear company of heart-friends whose very lives spurred me on to a deeper union with Christ. These are the young women with whom I shared many of the burdens and perplexities and yearnings of my young heart-and they are the ones who gathered around me on my wedding day, a gossamer host in pale pink organza, and prayed for me with the loving insight that only such a closeness can give. I feel certain that much of the fulfillment of my present life is due to the example of godliness and contentment that they so faithfully set before me.

We never looked back, and the years only grew sweeter as they slipped by. How could I recount it all: the fireside readings of Shakespeare; the plays staged in the dining room for an audience in the adjoining living room; the indispensable daily tea times wherein matters of consequence to our young hearts were treated with all due solemnity? Friends came to life from the pages of the worthiest literature; godly aspirations were tended with the utmost care; every opportunity was granted me to pursue the desires of my heart-desires undeniably placed there by God Himself. It would take a book to tell of my happiness in all of these things. From this vantage point, twelve years after my actual high school graduation, my heart is more overwhelmed than ever at the goodness and faithfulness of God. I thank Him, and I thank my parents for risking all on His sufficiency to give me a chance to live so abundantly . Because of Jesus, my girlhood was a splendor of birdsong and star shine; of tears turned rainbow-hued by the light of His countenance; of dreams materialized beyond description. I can only pray the same for the children that God might give me someday.

A Saint Among Booksellers

Monday, May 2nd, 2005

Katherine Downs was the kind of businesswoman who would trade her books for vegetables out of the back of someone’s truck, but would turn up her nose at the decorators that wanted her lovely old leather bound volumes to fill a dead space on a client’s shelf.  Her little bookshop was an endearing hodgepodge of gilt-edged first editions and dog-eared mystery novels; rows of Elsie Dinsmore and G. A. Henty at child level and valuable Joel Chandler Harris on a shelf behind her head as she sat at her desk.  Low in a back corner was my particular nook where I would sit among piles of Gene Stratton-Porter novels and nature books, turning the colorful plates over with a reverent hand and desperately trying to make up my mind which one would come home with me in exchange for a carefully-hoarded sum of baby-sitting money.  And invariably some sly calculating on Mrs. Downs’ part would make my total considerably less than I had anticipated.

            When Mrs. Downs asked me to help her in the shop it fulfilled a dream I had long cherished, and more often than not I would approach her at closing time with a stack of books equal in price to the salary she would have paid me that day.  But the collection that steadily grew on my shelves is more valuable to me than any money I might have saved.  And the bearing of so noble a soul upon my ideals and impressions of life is more valuable still.

            “The two best things in the world are a dirty cookbook and a marked-up Bible,” she used to say, her soft, wrinkled face blooming like a girl’s with the smile that she always wore.  And there was ample evidence in her life for the substance of such a statement.  How often did she greet me on a cold morning with a trim little packet of her famous sausage rolls still warm from the oven?  And how regularly did her life exemplify the realities which her cherished Bible proclaimed?  The two seemed almost inseparable, her cooking and her Christianity, as she blended them with the skill of an expert baker into a beautiful ministry of joyful service.  There were toffee bars in the mailbox for the postman and parcels of savories for the girls in the office upstairs.  But one of the most touching indications of this love-driven service was the instance of the ‘little old lady in south Georgia’ who watched the mail looking for Katherine’s teacakes as perhaps the brightest spot in a lonely life.

            “She says that I’m the only one that can make them like her mother used to,” Mrs. Downs would confide with a grin as she left for the post office on her lunch break.  I knew that it was trouble for her, and that undoubtedly the ‘little old lady’ wasn’t much older than herself, but there’s no room for thoughts like that in a heart that is running over with love.  And it was that very flavor of holiness that gave her cookies and tassies and biscuits the aroma of a sacrament.

             Patrons frequented her shop for Civil War books (in a section aptly labeled ‘War Between the States’), and children’s classics and limp volumes of poetry, but first and foremost—like me—they came for the sheer pleasure of Katherine’s bright-eyed candor and drawling wit.  I used to sit for hours, perched on my stool in the workroom repairing books, and listen as she regaled a customer with humorous stories from her youth or chuckling commentary on the politics of the booksellers’ world.  And after they had gone, I would curl up in the ragged green leather chair opposite her and let her talk about life and love and the man with whom she had so gladly spent her days.

            “Don’t ever marry a man that you don’t look up to in every way,” she would tell me with a softening of her eyes.  “Jack Downs was the greatest man I’ve ever known.  Oh, how I loved him!  And I would say that if he was sitting right here today.”

            There would be a pause, perhaps a dabbing of a tissue.  “I tell you, you’ve got to respect him.  That’s the most important thing.”

            None of my guy friends ever escaped a visit to the shop without her intense scrutiny.  And I never escaped without a barrage of questions and insinuations after they left.  But it wasn’t until a certain tall, dark-haired, blue-eyed young man began to visit that I was able to confess to her with a blush that, yes, here was the one that I would look up to and admire for the rest of my life.  To be sure, the bookshop itself played a vital role in the early days of our courtship.  But to this day it makes me happy to think that Mrs. Downs knew Philip, and that she approved.  For though she died before our wedding day I am convinced that the blessing of such a beloved saint only bodes well for our union.

             I dedicate this site to the memory of Katherine Downs under whose watchful guidance a love of books was cultivated into a geniune passion.  I am indebted to her for life.

What I Believe

Monday, May 2nd, 2005

 I believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth. 

And in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord; who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried; he descended into hell; the third day he rose again from the dead; he ascended into heaven, and sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty; from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead. 

I believe in the Holy Ghost; the holy catholic Church; the communion of saints; the forgiveness of sins; the resurrection of the body; and the life everlasting. AMEN.

Things I Love

Sunday, May 1st, 2005

Finally, bretheren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report, if there be any virtue and if there be any praise, think on these things…

                                                                                                Philippians 4:8

These I have loved:
White plates and cups, clean-gleaming,
Ringed with blue lines; and feathery, faery dust;
Wet roofs, beneath the lamp-light; the strong crust
Of friendly bread; and many-tasting food;
Rainbows; and the blue bitter smoke of wood;
And radiant raindrops couching in cool flowers;
And flowers themselves, that sway through sunny hours,
Dreaming of moths that drink them under the moon;
Then, the cool kindliness of sheets, that soon
Smooth away trouble; and the rough male kiss
Of blankets; grainy wood; live hair that is
Shining and free; blue-massing clouds; the keen
Unpassioned beauty of a great machine;
The benison of hot water; furs to touch;
The good smell of old clothes; and other such 
The comfortable smell of friendly fingers,
Hair’s fragrance, and the musty reek that lingers
About dead leaves and last year’s ferns…

 

from The Great Lover by Rupert Brooke