Friday, November 20, 2009
First Impressions, cont'd
I blinked. The foyer was huge. It was made from dark wood, mahogany I guessed it to be, Father had taught me to identify tree wood well enough. The black mouth of an empty fireplace gaped at me from the left wall. Up above it a dozen weapons were mounted to the wall. On the opposite wall a few swords decorated the wall and a large oil painting hung between them. Above the two doorways dangled the national flag.
"This way, miss," the butler said and I followed him all the way down the hall, taking a right turn at the end of it and down a flight of stairs. We entered into the main hustle and bustle of Fernfield Hall's life.
The butler called over the housekeeper, a Mrs. Maddock, and introduced me as the new housemaid. She quickly put me to work, telling me to follow "Jenny" as she was going to dust the drawing room.
"Jenny's" head popped up at the sound of her name. She was a small, young girl, her face pre-maturely aged with cares from serving. Being a housemaid had taken its toll on her already. Her hands were chapped and calloused, I noticed, as she handed me a dust rag. I blindly followed her up to first floor and we entered the drawing room.
Saturday, September 26, 2009
First Impressions
The wheels on the carriage rolled over the cobblestone drive with a clatter. I had been jolted around in the carriage for the past three hours and my destination lay just ahead. My limbs were cramped from being held in one position for so long and I longed for the chance to get out and stretch. The carriage slowed down and the main house loomed into view. The red bricks were stacked and cemented with absolute precision and the builders made perfect squares for the glass window panes to be placed. Both of the front doors stood wide open and a slight woman, dressed in what appeared to me to be servant's garb, came out balancing a large basket of laundry on her hip. The shrubbery circled around the house and flowers were planted along the walk and stood ready to greet one with a cheerful face.
I pressed my back against the carriage's seat, intimidated by the size and precision of everything. I had come expecting a small little plantation, much like the ones I'm accustomed to seeing at home. Instead I found a large estate--something I only dreamt about. Here was a home with more than one garden, multitudes of butlers and maids, it's own stable and wash house. What stood before me replaced paintings and stories with the real thing.
The carriage door opened and the butler's hand appeared, "Miss?"
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Thoughts for Thursday
~CS Lewis, Mere Christianity
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Thoughts for Thursday
~Richard C. Halverson
Monday, August 24, 2009
The Lamplighter
The flickering orange flame encased in the iron cylinder dangling in his hand provided hardly any warmth as he trudged down the streets he traveled for as long as he could remember.
A few villagers not yet in their homes bustled down the street, their dark cloaks billowing out behind them.
He lit the end of the long iron pole he held in his right hand and lifted it to the lamp secured on a black pole above his head. He waited patiently till the wick caught the flame and burned brightly. He lowered the pole and leaned his face close to it, catching a flicker of warmth before blowing it out again.
That face had seen it all: life and death, riches and poverty, war and peace, love and hatred. Each care and sorrow drew another line across the man's face.
Each night as darkness sealed the town he came out and walked down the streets, job in hand.
That lantern and pole lit the way for many men and boys hurrying home, closing shops, finishing another day's work as an apprentice.
The aged man was a known sight, most people hardly gave him a glance, but without him the streets would be dark and the way would be lost.
The pole was lifted to the sky again, brightening a portion of it before the insides of the lantern burst with light and the small flame was lowered and snuffed out.
He moved slowly down the cobblestone street, wet with a light drizzle that was falling from the sky, lessening the sting of the sharp November wind. He stopped under one of corner lanterns and raised the pole in time for the sting of the wind to blow it out. Patiently, he re-lit it and sent the corner flooding with light.
His frame bent from eighty years of life un-locked the door to his empty house. He tucked away the pole and set the lantern on the table where they would rest till the sun peeked over the roof tops and it was time to turn the lamps out.
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Thoughts for Thursday
~Robin Jones Gunn, Surprise Endings
Sunday, August 9, 2009
His Workmanship
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Thoughts for Thursday
~John MacArthur, The MacArthur New Testament Commentary
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Thoughts for Thursday
~Abraham Lincoln, October 1862
Monday, July 27, 2009
Abandoned
Thursday, July 16, 2009
What He's Taught Me
I stared into the empty box in disbelief, then looked up at my husband.
"That's all? That's all that's left?" I said, hoping against hope that it was untrue.
"That's all," he repeated.
The town clock began to chime and Lewis looked up to listen.
Five. Six. Seven.
Lewis grabbed his coat from off the chair, "Time for work."
He kissed me on the cheek and went out into the street.
I stood rigid by the table, staring blankly into the box.
One sovereign. That was all we had left--and he had taken it with him.
"Time for work," his words echoed in my ears. I scoffed. Time to look for work was more like it.
Ever since the duke had cancelled the construction project Lewis went out into the city to look for work. Some of the time he would pick up an odd job that lasted a few hours. I knew when that happened because he wouldn't come home for lunch.
We were one step away from the workhouse.
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Thoughts for Thursday
"Yet you would smile at an architect who, having a noble structure to build, should begin to work on it in a haphazard way, putting in a brick here and a stone there, weaving in straws and sticks if they come to hand, and when asked on what work he was engaged and what manner of building he intended to erect, should reply he had no plan but thought something would come of it."
~Elizabeth Prentiss, Stepping Heavenward
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
A Smile on Her Face
“Annie, are your eyes bothering you?” I asked.
“I don’t know, a little. They sting a bit.”
“Put a cold cloth on them when we get home.”
As soon as we got home, that’s what she did, for as long as she could stand it. Annie can never sit idle for very long. She threw the cloth on the table and snatched up the music I was trying to play. “Playing that way would give anyone an headache. Slide over and I’ll show you how to play it.”
She sat down and played the first few measures, then paused and started over.
“Annie, you’re playing in the wrong key. Are you sure you can read it?” I asked.
“It is a bit fuzzy,” she admitted.
“You’re starting to scare me, Annie.”
She smiled, “I’m sure I’ll be fine tomorrow.”
But she wasn’t. I told Father my concerns on the third day and he and Mother took Annie to see Dr. Moss the day after.
Annie was going blind.
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Thursday, July 2, 2009
Thoughts for Thursday
"We all do, foolish one. Do you know what makes history? Pain--and shame--and rebellion--and bloodshed and heartache. [Emily], ask yourself how many hearts ached--and broke--to make those crimson and purple pages in history that you find so enthralling. I told you the story of Leonidas and his Spartans the other day. They had mothers, sisters, and sweethearts. If they could have fought a bloodless battle at the polls wouldn't it have been better if not so dramatic...And, like all female creatures, you form your opinions by your feelings. Well, hope for your thrilling career--but remember that if there is to be a drama in your life somebody must pay the piper in the coin of suffering. If not you--them someone else."
~LM Montgomery, Emily of New Moon
Monday, June 29, 2009
The Noon Hour
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Thoughts for Thursday
~CS Lewis, Mere Christianity
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Remembrance
The young lady knelt before the locked trunk in the dusty, old attic of the white house with blue shutters that she had played in so long ago.
She slipped the key out of her pocket and unlocked the trunk. She opened the lid and let it fall back with a thud. She stared into it and lifted out the top item—a pair of baby boots. The lady smiled and put them on her fingers.
She laid the boots aside and turned back to the trunk. There were two matching christening gowns and a bunch of child's drawings tied with a piece of string. The lady stared fondly at the top drawing, remembering the proud look on the face that received it many years ago.
She laid them down to her left, intending to come back to them.
There was an old primer, with the binding falling off and an old composition book that the young lady snatched up.
Inside were pages of handwriting practice, spelling lists, and towards the end a few verses adorned with drawn leaves, and little illustrations in the margins.
She laid it aside and picked up a packet of letters tied with a green ribbon. “Love letters” the lady whispered, with a touch of amazement in her voice.
Not wishing to pry but still curious she put the letters on top of the drawings.
There were news clippings, but only one held her interest.
“Mr. Joseph Byrd engaged to Miss Ada DuPont, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William DuPont. Wedding to be held in the Spring.”
She shook her head. What was the significance of a wedding announcement? It was the wedding that holds the significance. But as she began to slip it into her pocket, her fingers caught in between the small pages. There was her wedding picture attached to the back.
There was a small doll and the young lady gasped. “That's where that went to,” she whispered.
She held it in her hand and smoothed out the worn dress. The doll was wearing one of her Christmas dresses, the one the lady had never put on her, on account of it being too “old fashioned.” Now she regretted her words. The dress had been given to her out of love and the hope of striking her fancy.
She remembered the day she finished the doll. Her mother had been right, she had enjoyed sewing a “real thing” instead of a sampler. She detested sitting and embroidering fire screens as her in-laws expected her to do. Dolls, dresses, and upholstery were much more fun.
The young lady laid the doll on top of the letters and drawings, and turned back to the items in the trunk.
There was a tattered hymnal with her grandmother's name on the front . She lifted the cover and it fell open to the hymn that she had heard sung almost every day she spent in the rambling white house. The one her mother sang to her every night, till she was begged to stop. “I'm too old for that now, Mama,” she had said.
The young lady unconsciously began to hum the tune as she closed the hymnal and set it down. She looked back into the trunk and saw a knotted and twisted piece of blue crocheting and the lady stopped humming in surprise. It was her first attempt at crocheting and which she had proudly presented. Later on, she thought it was ugly—compared to her newest piece and had wanted to throw it out but couldn't find it. Seeing it lying there brought on a new meaning and she wrapped it around the doll.
Then she caught sight of a red photograph album with “1893” engraved on the cover in gold thread.
The young lady picked it up. “1893?” she whispered questioningly and opened the album. Then she remembered. “Our last family vacation—before I went on my way.”
She looked through the pages, smiling at the people and faces in the photographs. Even though it took a few seconds to take the pictures the people had as pleasant a face as they could get. Except for herself; though it wasn't stern, it smiling like those standing beside her.
Tears glistened in her eyes. Deep down she had enjoyed the time spent with all her relatives, though she wouldn't admit it till now. But there was no one to admit it too that would truly understand.
She finished looking through the album and picked up the next volume in the trunk, assuming it was another of the same. It was her childhood Bible. The book with the illustrations she had poured over as a girl and avoided whenever possible when she was older.
The young lady's tears began to flow down her cheeks as she opened the book. As she read some lines she heard the voice that had read them to her ring in her ears. The voice that was now silenced forever; the one that read, “David went to the stream and picked out five flat, shiny stones” and the one that called after her when she ran out of the room “Ada, dear, come back!” The one she had helped silence.
The young lady couldn't hold it back anymore and she moved away from the trunk and stood in front of the window to compose herself.
She looked out on to the lawn where she ran about as a girl, munching cookies, drawing pictures, and picnicking with the servants.
The item she had originally come up for lay exposed at the bottom of the trunk, but held seldom interest for her now.
She turned back to the trunk and stared at the wedding dress laying at the bottom. How she remembered being a little girl examining every inch of the dress with her eyes, for she was not allowed to touch it. How many times had she said she would wear it at her wedding and when the time came, she hadn't even thought of her mother's dress tucked away in the trunk. Oh, how much fancy things had held her attention when she was little and how now surrounded by them she found little joy in them.
Her mother had saved everything, down to her first sketches. How much pride her mother had taken in her work, as much as if her mother had made it her self. How much pain she must have caused her when she went her own way and was glad to do it.
The young lady picked up the photograph album and the hymnal and placed them back in the trunk.
A little girl the image of the young lady came up the steps and walked over to her.
The young lady looked up. “I'm almost done,” she said, not wishing to break the spell of the tender memories lovingly placed inside the old steamer trunk.
She put the last few things in the trunk, closed and locked it.
She gathered the Bible, the drawings, the letters, the piece of crocheting, and the doll into her arms and took her daughter's hand.
Determined not to forget the moments if front of her mother's remembrance trunk, she walked down the attic steps.
Welcome!
Thanks for taking time to read. I am planning to post short stories and other little things I write, mainly to get them out there and to get more feedback on them.
I hope you enjoy them and please let me know what you honestly think of them, and any improvements you can think of or anything that was unclear.
Hope you enjoy them!
~Ruth