Monday, May 31, 2021

Poem: Sweet Things from Corruption

I've been fascinated with the irony of good arising from evil; of beloved events resulting from that which horrifies, nauseates, disgusts. What greater good is there, from my selfish perspective, than my own existence? Had Alois and Klara been distracted from the passion that resulted in the improbable coincidence of sperm and egg that produced their son Adolph Hitler, millions would likely have been spared terrible deaths. And my perverse brain ponders: my own birth required an improbable aligning of billions, or perhaps nonillions, of accidents AFTER the war precipitated by Hitler and his buddies. What are the chances that I could exist if Adolph didn't? Infinitesimal I suspect.

This Compost

 - 1819-1892

1

Something startles me where I thought I was safest,
I withdraw from the still woods I loved,
I will not go now on the pastures to walk,
I will not strip the clothes from my body to meet my lover the sea,
I will not touch my flesh to the earth as to other flesh to renew me.

O how can it be that the ground itself does not sicken?
How can you be alive you growths of spring?
How can you furnish health you blood of herbs, roots, orchards, grain?
Are they not continually putting distemper'd corpses within you?
Is not every continent work'd over and over with sour dead?

Where have you disposed of their carcasses?
Those drunkards and gluttons of so many generations?
Where have you drawn off all the foul liquid and meat?
I do not see any of it upon you to-day, or perhaps I am deceiv'd,
I will run a furrow with my plough, I will press my spade through the sod and turn it up underneath,
I am sure I shall expose some of the foul meat.

2

Behold this compost! behold it well!
Perhaps every mite has once form'd part of a sick person—yet behold!
The grass of spring covers the prairies,
The bean bursts noiselessly through the mould in the garden,
The delicate spear of the onion pierces upward,
The apple-buds cluster together on the apple-branches,
The resurrection of the wheat appears with pale visage out of its graves,
The tinge awakes over the willow-tree and the mulberry-tree,
The he-birds carol mornings and evenings while the she-birds sit on their nests,
The young of poultry break through the hatch'd eggs,
The new-born of animals appear, the calf is dropt from the cow, the colt from the mare,
Out of its little hill faithfully rise the potato's dark green leaves,
Out of its hill rises the yellow maize-stalk, the lilacs bloom in the dooryards,
The summer growth is innocent and disdainful above all those strata of sour dead.

What chemistry!
That the winds are really not infectious,
That this is no cheat, this transparent green-wash of the sea which is so amorous after me,
That it is safe to allow it to lick my naked body all over with its tongues,
That it will not endanger me with the fevers that have deposited themselves in it,
That all is clean forever and forever,
That the cool drink from the well tastes so good,
That blackberries are so flavorous and juicy,
That the fruits of the apple-orchard and the orange-orchard, that melons, grapes, peaches, plums, will
   none of them poison me,
That when I recline on the grass I do not catch any disease,
Though probably every spear of grass rises out of what was once a catching disease.

Now I am terrified at the Earth, it is that calm and patient,
It grows such sweet things out of such corruptions,
It turns harmless and stainless on its axis, with such endless successions of diseas'd corpses,
It distills such exquisite winds out of such infused fetor,
It renews with such unwitting looks its prodigal, annual, sumptuous crops,
It gives such divine materials to men, and accepts such leavings from them at last.

Saturday, May 29, 2021

The Last Graduation for Mr. Shaw's Stars

(Under construction) 

When I arrived at Bancroft Elementary School in the tiny mining town of Bancroft, West Virginia, in the late summer of 1969 I intended to complete my masters degree and two years of teaching in the National Teacher Corps while I sought to discern my true calling in life. It took a number of years for it to penetrate my thick skull that teaching was and is my calling. During the next five decades I was privileged to have my life enriched by hundreds of pre-teen youngsters, many of their parents, scores of fellow teachers and administrators, and all sorts of other folks who have served as resources of one kind or another for my teaching. 

In the eight years since I retired from full time teaching I have relished the world's greatest retirement job as a "storyteller/naturalist" at Arrowhead Environmental Education Center introdub=cing hundreds more children to the wonders of the flora and fauna of Georgia.

But today marked a sentimental final close of one chapter.: The very last group of "Mr. Shaw's Stars" graduated, most from Armuchee High School. I have tried the last years to attend the AHS graduation to celebrate this special day with those beloved ten-year-olds now on the cusp of their adulthoods. I wish I had made that a tradition from the beginning of my career.






















Friday, May 28, 2021

Gleaning Facebook: Last Day of School

 I led a nature walk at Armuchee Elementary on the very last day of school...

One class beginning the nature walk near the bus entrance on the stairs and bridge built as an Eagle project by Thomas Fitzpatrick.


On the first Eagle project bridge built on the trail. Jesse Crider was the Eagle Scout.


I love this spot along the trail right at the Crider bridge. The bluff above the creek here is covered  with interesting plants and is especially beautiful early in the year when the spring ephemeral - Dwarf Crested Iris, Toothworts, Hepatica, etc - are in bloom.

I can stand in the creek and talk to a whole class gathered on the bridge.

And happy kids as they leave the trail.


Spiny Softshell Mama

 Mama Spiny Softshell Turtle never learns, bless her heart. She is laying her eggs in the driveway again this year.


These turtles look prehistoric to me.



Thea is a budding wildlife biologist.














Last Day of School Nature Walk

I led nature walks at Armuchee Elementary on this very last day of school, 2020-2021.

The first group started at the stairs and bridge near the bus entrance. This "new" entrance to our Armuchee Elementary Nature Trail was built as an Eagle Project by my former student, Thomas Fitzpatrick.

 


This bridge was the first Eagle Project for which I got to serve as the school coordinator. Eagle Scout Jesse Crider was the builder.


With the kids on the Jesse Crider bridge I can stand in the creek below the bluff...

...and point out the wonderful botany and geology there.





Friday, May 21, 2021

Gleaning Facebook: Dr. Fernando Molina

About half my life ago I was in need of a new primary care physician. Dr. Culbreth had retired. (I would not see $5 office visits ever again.) Somehow I ended up in the brand new office on Fifth Avenue, about where Fourth Ward School had stood not long before, and under the care of a young immigrant doctor named Fernando Molina. We hit it off well.
I told him that I have a fairly rugged tolerance for aches and pains and I didn’t want him to be overly concerned with easing symptoms but to always concentrate on “keeping me alive.” My family history includes lots of heart attacks and some pretty early ones.

Well, I have to say he’s done what I asked and kept me kicking into my 75th year. He moved long ago into the Family Practice at Harbin Clinic and I stuck with him.
And now he is retiring on me. The nerve!

Here’s to many happy years of playing with eight grandkids, golfing, traveling, and relaxation.

From my last appointment with Dr. Fernando Molina. He's a good guy and I'll kiss him.

Comments


Sandra Pride
I know the feeling. I've outlived 2, and working on more.


Debbie Reece Grigsby
PM me your new pick. I have a feeling I’ll be in the same boat in a few years. 

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Claudia Kennedy
Thank you Dr. Molina!


Thomas Middleton
I knew Dr. Molina well; he lived 2 doors down from me on 6th floor Dana at Berry. Last time I saw him was at Redmond in 1980 when I was just starting out in respiratory and he was an intern fresh out of med school. Glad to hear that his practice turned out so well.


Lydia Trimble Peters
It’s sad when the really good ones go.


Clare Lacey Gilliland
He is my doctor too. I have not been informed yet of his retirement. Is that official?


Terrell Shaw
Well, Clare, I hope I'm not blabbing! He just told me this morning. I assumed it was common knowledge. He may be telling his patients one on one as they come in for appointments. He said he was 100% my doc till the last day if I need him and that that will come before my next regular appointment. I'm gonna give his replacement a shot at keeping me going a while longer. 

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Susan Childers
Boy do I hate to hear that news....He's cared for my family for many years.


Julie Adair
What a great story!


Barron Kirkpatrick Frazier Brown
You are fortunate. My primary, a young Khurdish women who loved to travel, decided to sign a year's contract with the health service of New Zealand. Fortunately her friend, a young Pakistani woman, is my new primary and thus far I'm pleased.


Joan Ledbetter
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!! Dr. Molina is MY doctor!! He cannot go anywhere! I have my appointment with him tomorrow. We will have words!


Terrell Shaw
I hope I haven't blabbed... maybe I should take this down. I figured, as usual, I wuz the last to know! pastedGraphic_3.png


Joan Ledbetter
Terrell Shaw
No, I imagine he will tell me the same thing tomorrow. I am not really surprised. I just ‘selfishly’ hate it. He is such a kind doctor,


Samantha Bishop
Joan Ledbetter
, please let him know that I am not happy with him.


Joan Ledbetter
Samantha Bishop
I told him that he had a fan club on FB 

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Samantha Bishop
Joan Ledbetter
, I have an appt with him on Wednesday.


Marilyn Murdock McLean
My Dr is retiring on me too! Guess I’ll have to be looking for a young whippersnapper!


Chad Watson
As a 7th grader with streph throat that wouldn't go away after a few weeks (or test positive) , I was referred to Dr. Molina . I was very sick and very scared and very weak. He tested me for mono and the result was positive and he started aggressive treatment right away. I went to his office for what seemed like 3 days a week for about 6 more weeks, but he kept me from having to be admitted to the hospital.
I lost touch with him after moving away to college.
Happy retirement Dr. Molina !! Thanks for all you've done serving our community!


Samantha Bishop
I adore Dr. Molina! He is my doctor as well and he is wonderful! I’m this is the first I have heard of his retirement. 

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Joel Todino
Terrell, the scary thing for me is, that I trained him in his Internal Medicine skills; and now, he is retiring. I must really be getting old!


Peggy Davis
Finding a Dr after yours has retired is a daunting task!
Welcome Dr Molina!


Detrick Prosperous Redding
A great doctor!


Charlene Payne
John and I ask our doctors every time we go for a check-up, "Your not retiring any time soon are you?" It is a husband and wife team who are just a little younger than we are (why does 75 and 71 sound so old?? I am thrilled we made it this far without any big problems!! We still think we are in our 40's until we try something and muscles start yelling and we can't remember why)


Terrell Shaw
Charlene Payne
I often say I feel young till I get down and havta get up! Hi to John. Y’all stop by if you ever make it back to Rome.


 

Monday, May 10, 2021

Gleaning Facebook: Spelling "Queen Bee"

Sheila and I have been playing the NYT Spelling Bee game daily for the last few months. We get a kick out of it. Sheila usually beats me to the "Genius" level but every now and then I get there first. And once a week or so we make "Queen Bee" status which means we have found every word in that day's list. I got there today! Yay! Sheila did too (but I was first). So I decided to be a braggart and add this frame for 24 hours.

 

Sunday, May 09, 2021

Old Leaves: Mother's Day Replay

For Mother's Day I'll repost my blog entry for Mother's ninetieth birthday back in 2013. That amazing woman is now 98 and i am privileged to visit with her almost daily and make new memories to accompany the ones mentioned in this post and many more form the last 74 years. Here 'tis:


-----------


We will celebrate my mother's birthday ten days early on February 9th -- this coming Saturday -- with a party at Trinity Methodist Church here in Rome. 2-4 p.m. Y'all come. 

(Edited February 10, 2013: We had a great day celebrating our mother yesterday. Each of the seven siblings took part in the program. Our brother-in-law Chuck Roszel added some heartfelt extemporaneous remarks at the end as well. I sang two songs, "The Love of God" during my remarks, and "Amazing Grace" with the congregation joining in, at the end.  Here are (approximately), my remarks.


My Mother is an amazing woman. 

I’ve always known that. 

Ruth Shaw is a very active woman -- creative, determined, dedicated, caring, independent, and sharp as a tack -- who will turn ninety-years-young on February 19. 

And I remember her thirtieth birthday, when I would have been almost six. I thought that sounded sort of old then. 

I remember walking hand in hand with her at about that time down Main Street of little Mackville KY from the Methodist parsonage to the elementary school for my first day of first grade. I remember the comfort of that hand.

And I remember the utter shame of having to walk the long blocks from Fourth Ward Elementary in Griffin GA toward our little parsonage on South Ninth Street carrying a note from Mrs. Giles about my third grade misbehavior. I would have to present that evidence of my black heart to my wonderful mother. I no longer remember the particular sin, but I do remember that I did not want to disappoint Ruth Shaw. 

My mother read to us. I can see the Bible story book in my mind’s eye. One of these days I want to find that book and buy one to have at my house. I loved those stories. Even more I loved the one who read them to us. 

I remember Mother walking me and Carol and Debbie down College Street to Griffin’s Hawkes Public Library to load up on Hardy Boy books, and Jim Kjelgaard, and boyhood biographies of Lee and Washington, and such, AND stopping by the bakery nearby for gingerbread men on the way home.

I remember the pride and awe of hearing her singing beautiful harmony with my Daddy --  “The Love of God” --  at a Sunday night service at Midway Methodist. So in honor of that but without the harmony -- unless some of you want to provide it and feel free! -- I’d like to sing that old song.



  1. The love of God is greater far
  1. Than tongue or pen can ever tell;
  1. It goes beyond the highest star,
  1. And reaches to the lowest hell;
  1. The guilty pair, bowed down with care,
  1. God gave His Son to win;
  1. His erring child He reconciled,
  1. And pardoned from his sin.
  • Refrain:
  • Oh, love of God, how rich and pure! How measureless and strong!

  • It shall forevermore endure—The saints’ and angels’ song.
  1. Could we with ink the ocean fill,
  1. And were the skies of parchment made,
  1. Were every stalk on earth a quill,
  1. And every man a scribe by trade;
  1. To write the love of God above
  1. Would drain the ocean dry;
  1. Nor could the scroll contain the whole,
  1. Though stretched from sky to sky.


We thought we’d arrived in heaven -- at least I did -- in 1958 when we moved from the modest little parsonage in Griffin to the brick mansion-in-my-eyes at Ellijay. On the day we moved Daddy pulled the car onto the shoulder along Highway 5 as we neared Ellijay to soak in an amazing sight. The white clouds in an azure sky had nestled onto and around the mountains, allowing those magnificent  summits to peek out above them.  

I have many good memories from Ellijay, but a terrifying one occured about 1960. David a toddler decided to spread the ends of a bobby pin and poke them into an electrical outlet. Luckily the circuit he completed was broken when the pin burned in two and dropped to the wooden floor where it burned a permanent record of the event. Mother handed the convulsing David to me to hold while she drove us down Dalton Street toward the doctor’s office. Her calm calmed us then and often since, even when she was the one suffering and we should have been the ones soothing.

Like every Southern family at the time, our extended family members were not unanimously accepting of the tumult of the day. I remember with pride my bashful Mother defending Martin Luther King in some family discussions -- well before it was the popular thing to do.

I could go on and on. 

I love my mother not just for herself, but for those who loved her enough to guide her toward the person she has become. Those include my grandmother Ieula Ann Dick Baird, who as a widow raised her eleventh child to revere the father, Wilson Baird, she lost when she was only nine, to love the God who had guided him, and to love Ieula’s own grandfather, Bogan Mask, who had shown kindness to mistreated slaves and bravely stood for his beliefs as a licensed Methodist exhorter and took in Ieula, her siblings and her widowed, pregnant mother when Charles Ervin Dick died at 35. 

I love her for the the quiet bravery, dedication to duty, and love of God exhibited by her brothers and sisters, and the love of a young husband and his band of precocious, mischievous brothers, gregarious Daddy Shaw, and determined Mama Shaw. 

I love her for my inspiring siblings, whom she reined in when needed, but to whom she gave the reins when they were ready.

And of course there are the “lemon fluff” frozen desserts she made in ice trays, snow-cream during our Kentucky days, the cinnamon yeast rolls on Christmas mornings, and the traditional little bottles of Welch’s Grape Juice in our stockings, banana pudding on other special occasions, the cornbread dressing with the big Butterball turkey at Thanksgiving, date-nut cakes on my birthdays... my mouth is watering.

Which brings us to some verse I wrote for Mama many years ago now. 


Dandelions in a Milk Carton

Thank you, Mama, 
For nursing me and diapering me,
for a dry set of sheets when I wet another,
for the Bible story book and Uncle Remus,
for all five sisters and my little brother,
 
And all the good eating stuff
Like biscuits from wooden bowls
and datenut cakes and lemon fluff,
and Russian tea and yeast rolls 
 
For Jesus-loves-the-little-children and Deep-and-Wide,
For walking to school that first day by my side
And for your loving smile when I came in a run
with dandelions in a milk carton for all you’ve done.

remember with pride how as a widow in her early sixties my mother followed her heart, her calling, and her conscience, despite her bashful nature, to take over my father’s ministry, complete seminary, become an outstanding preacher, and successfully minister to several churches and many hurting people in the years since. Many times this was while she heroically faced one of the most debilitating and painful diseases known to mankind (Trigeminal neuralgia) and its resulting brain surgeries and medications -- and later facial surgery and cancer.

Everyone has always assumed Mother to be younger than her actual age as long as I can remember, and she still seems much younger than what the calendar indicates. I have always believed my Mama the prettiest, smartest, and kindest one around -- and, of course, also the best cook. Still do.

Happy birthday, Mama

Saturday, May 08, 2021

The Lion's Paw (The whole thing!)

Note - May 2021: Last Spring, as we dealt with the pandemic, I got permission from the publishers to read my favorite children's novel for students stuck with online lessons for the year. As the pandemic winds down (Please!) I thought I'd post the links one more time in case you missed them. I had a great time reading the book and I'd love for more kids to be exposed to this wonderful story. I think AW Ink still has some hardback copies of the book available. Check them out at the link below. You will find links to each chapter in this post.

Sheila and I have had our vacinations, I hope my readers have as well. If not VAX UP! Let's whup this thing once and for all.

-----------------------------------

 

Order your own brand-new copy of The Lion's Paw by Robb White 

from AWInk, Inc. at  www.thelionspaw.org


Chapter One

Here's the first chapter of my favorite children's novel, The Lion's Paw by Robb White. I am reading it online for those folks stuck at home during the Covid-19 pandemic. Y'all stay home, wash hands, sanitize often, be careful!

Thanks to the folks at AWInk, Inc. for allowing me to do this. Thanks especially to Leslie Saunders, Robb White's step daughter for her cooperation. You can read a 17 minute rambling monologue about my association with this book since 1970 here: The Lion's Paw: Preface

Or just start with Chapter One here...


Read more at these links:

The Lion's Paw: Preface

The Lion's Paw: Chapter Two

The Lion's Paw: Chapter Three


Sunday, May 02, 2021

Clocktower Tours

The Rome Area History Center sponsors a tour of our town's iconic Clocktower on the first Saturday of each month from April to September. I have enjoyed giving the "Up Top" portion of the tour several times now. Here are some pics from yesterday's tours.

Selena Tilly, Archivist at the History Center, discusses the history of our City Clock and Tower inside what used to be the city's primary water reservoir which is inside the clocktower.

This drone video of the Clocktower Tour in progress was created by artist Jeremy Smith:




These three panoramic photos give a full 360° view from atop the City Clock...

1. The view toward (left to right)
"The Columns" on Fourth Ave.,
Summit Hill mills (formerly Southeastern Mills)
South Broad Street
Myrtle Hill
The confluence of the rivers
The Forum
The Courthouse
Winshape Center (at the base of Lavendar Mountain directly beyond the center section of the courthouse)
The Turner-McCall bridge over the Oostanaula
The Library
City Hall (and Auditorium)
Riverside (in the distance directly over City Hall)
Jackson Hill
Metropolitan United Methodist Church
Saint Mary's Catholic Church
North Broad Street


 
Panorama Two:
The confluence of the rivers
The Forum
The Courthouse
Winshape Center (at the base of Lavendar Mountain directly beyond the center section of the courthouse)
The Turner-McCall bridge over the Oostanaula
The Library
City Hall (and Auditorium)
Riverside (in the distance directly over City Hall)
Jackson Hill
Metropolitan United Methodist Church
Saint Mary's Catholic Church
North Broad Street
The Turner-McCall bridge over the Etowah
The new East Bend Shopping Center
Fifth Avenue at East Third Street
Old Shorter Hill (look for the pale yellow house with a prominent exterior chimney)



Panorama Three
North Broad Street
The Turner-McCall bridge over the Etowah
The new East Bend Shopping Center
Fifth Avenue at East Third Street
Old Shorter Hill (look for the pale yellow house with a prominent exterior chimney)
The Columns
First Untied Methodist Church
Mount Aventine
Summit Hill mills
First Baptist Church
Myrtle Hill