Showing posts with label poems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poems. Show all posts

Friday, December 13, 2024

The Jar of Jelly -- a Christmas poem I have loved for years

 

  
The Jar of Jelly 

 To others' eyes, it may not look like much;
Wrapped up in festive ribbons and some seals
To make it look more Christmasy and gay.
But you for whom it's meant will find, I know,
All that is packed within the little jar,
You will translate the label properly
And see just what the contents really are.
"Wild grape -- " you'll say, and suddenly
You'll not be walking dusty city halls,
But down an autumn-gilded little lane
Between the jewelled vines of old stone walls.
Instead of dingy bricks beyond a court
You'll see a spruce-green hillside, sharp and clear,
Sweet fern and bayberry will scent the breeze,
The whirr of partridge wings delight your ear.
It is not much to send, this one small jar,
But you will see that in it, pure and true,
Shimmers the essence of the place we love,
Preserved especially by me, for you. 

-- Barbara Overton Christie 

 I've posted this before -- in 2006! -- but I am posting it again for the enjoyment of my newer readers.  I have loved this poem for many years.

  My mother had several issues of Farm Journal's Christmas Book, and I loved to peruse them every year. This poem was included on a page with recipes for gift jams and jellies. 

 I was fortunate enough to be given some old issues of the Farm Journal Christmas Book in later years, and the issue containing this poem happened to be one of them. I have enjoyed so much having these books for my very own. 

This poem in particular shows how even a very small gift can come straight from the heart -- and that it can be much more than just a jar of jelly.

Thursday, April 11, 2024

A snippet of a poem

 


 I found this snippet of poetry on a vintage stationery box.  The stationery (by Brownie, apparently a design called "Sweet Clover")  is long gone and the box is in poor shape.  But this bit of verse is too lovely not to share:

I know a place where the sun is like gold,
And the cherry blooms burst with snow,
And way underneath is the loveliest spot
Where the four leaf clovers grow.

Beautiful, don't you agree?

"Where the sun is like gold" gives a fairly recognizable picture.  "Cherry blooms burst with snow" is a little bit more difficult, but when you realize that cherry trees in bloom often have a snowy look it makes more sense.  Just a pretty, pretty bit of verse that paints a sweet picture for the reader.

Stationery, like so many other things, was so much more meaningful and lovely back in the day. 

Tuesday, December 07, 2021

A beautiful vintage poem

 

I'm blessed to have a wonderful collection of vintage New Hampshire Troubadour magazines from the late 1940s through 1950.  These little magazines (they measure only about 4 1/2 by 6 inches and contain about 16 pages) are treasure troves of vintage New Hampshire goodness.  Over the masthead on the first page is this statement:

The New Hampshire Troubadour comes to you every month singing the praises of New Hampshire, a state whose beauty and opportunities should tempt you to come here and share those good things that make life here so delightful.  

That is how things used to be, friends.  The magazine was produced by the State Planning and Development Commission and a subscription cost 50¢ per year.

The photo at the top of the post was the inside front cover of the December 1947 issue.  Oh, what a beautiful reminder of days gone by!  The poem I am going to share -- The Old, Old Joys by Avis Turner French -- comes from this issue.

THE OLD, OLD JOYS

I want for Christmas more than anything,
The old, old joys, the folks I love all near
Beneath the treasured roof of home once more
As we have been for every happy year.
To gather Christmas Eve for gifts of love,
To laugh for sheer delight believing this,
The deepest joys of life are simple ways
Like words of tenderness, a gentle kiss.
I want the atmosphere of mystery
As much as when a child, the tinsel glow,
To sing the songs that never will grow old,
How Christ had come to bless us long ago.
On Christmas day I wish to share with those
Less fortunate than I, to freely give,
For only by the giving of one's best
Does one grow richer, learning how to live.
At last I want to climb a snow-clad hill
To watch the miracles of earth and sky,
To read within the firmament His law,
That good triumphs, that love can never die.
I want these joys, oh, more than anything.

-- Avis Turner French

Isn't that beautiful?  It speaks so very much of what my childhood Christmases were like.  My grandmother's farmhouse, where many of my Christmas memories are centered, is still standing.  It looks somewhat different inside, but some things are the same.  My own childhood home is still standing, but barely.  It looks as if it is dying by inches as it is dismantled bit by bit.  At the end an excavator will come in and knock it down.  That stings a bit, but I am oh, so thankful for my memories.

Yet I want these joys -- the ones the poet spoke about so eloquently -- for others too.  So many folks today have never experienced a Christmas like this.  So much has been taken from us as a society over the years.  I certainly pray that we will once again learn how to live,  to give our best, to point others to the timeless truths of God's Word.  Many of us may never again gather "beneath the treasured roof of home" -- but we can still share the "deepest joys of life" with our loved ones.  I hope that you all enjoyed this poem as much as I did!

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

One day at a time

 

 I have so many posts rattling around in my head, but there is no time to work on them today.  Posts for the new year, goals for the year and the month, recipe posts, memory posts, things we've done ... so many ideas, so little time!  But the one I am going to share is something I consider very important.  I fully expect that the internet could go down sometime today, so I want to leave you with some encouragement.

The little booklet pictured at the top of the post is one of many that I found at my parents' home.  With their business, they often included a Gospel tract or booklet in the employees' paychecks, and sometimes with bills that were being paid.  So they kept large amounts and a great variety of such printed material on hand.  I donated many to our church and threw really dated ones away.  But this one is the only one of its kind that I found.  It may have been part of a sample assortment, I'm not sure.  Regardless, it has been on my nightstand for weeks and I have read through it often in that time.  I thought it would be a blessing to many of my readers as well.

What this booklet basically is, is a wonderful poem by Annie Johnson Flint.  Some Scripture is also included.  With the lovely illustration on the front and the attractive graphics within, this little booklet is indeed a blessing for believers.  Unfortunately The Tract League, from whence this originally came, is no longer selling tracts as of December 2020.  Here is the poem:

ONE DAY AT A TIME

One day at a time,
with its failures and fears,
With its hurts and mistakes,
with its weakness and tears.
With its portion of pain
and its burden of care;
One day at a time we must
 meet and must bear.

One day at a time to be
patient and strong:
To be calm under trial and
sweet under wrong;
Then its toiling shall pass
and its sorrow shall cease;
It shall darken and die,
and the night
shall bring peace.

One day at a time --
but the day is so long,
And the heart is not brave,
and the soul is not strong.
O Thou merciful Christ,
be Thou near all the way;
Give courage and patience
and strength for the day.

Swift cometh His answer,
so clear and so sweet;
"Yea, I will be with thee'
thy troubles to meet;
I will not forget thee,
nor fail thee, nor grieve;
I will not forsake thee;
I never will leave."

Not yesterday's load we
are called on to bear,
Nor the morrow's uncertain
and shadowy care;
Why should we look forward
or back with dismay?
Our needs, as our mercies,
are but for the day.

One day at a time,
and the day is His day;
He hath numbered its hours,
though they haste or delay.
His grace is sufficient,
we walk not alone;
As the day, so the strength
that He giveth His own.

 

Scripture verses included with the poem are as follows.  You might wish to look them up.

"My flesh and my heart faileth: but God is the strength of my heart, and my portion forever."  (Psalm 73:26)

"For which cause we faint not: but though our outward man perish, yet the inward man is renewed day by day."  (2 Corinthians 4:16)

"O LORD, be gracious unto us; we have waited for Thee; be Thou their arm every morning, our salvation also in the time of trouble."  (Isaiah 33:2)

"And He said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee; for My strength is made perfect in weakness."  (2 Corinthians 12:9)

"He hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee."  (Hebrews 13:5)

"But the God of all grace, who hath called us unto His eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after ye have suffered a while, make you perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle you."

 May we all feel strengthened and settled today!  This is what God wants for us.  Remember. as our days, so shall our strength be.  And please be praying for our country, today and every day.

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Poem for a Tuesday in May

 I scanned the cover of this May 1950 New Hampshire Troubadour several years ago and have often used it in May blog posts.  Recently I was dusting the table where my small personal collection of New Hampshire Troubadours is displayed.  I like to keep the current month's issue on top, and when I picked up May 1950 to move it into place,  I smiled, thinking about the apple blossoms that are again filling up the view from our bedroom's dormer window.  I wondered if perhaps I might post something else from this little magazine.

  I  turned the issue over and this is the back cover:

I thought I would share the poem from the back cover today, though I vaguely recalled having written about it before.  Upon searching my blog, I found that indeed I had posted this poem previously, in 2015.  But I'm not even sure anyone read it, as there were no comments.  I decided to share it again, and I hope no one minds.  

It is a short poem titled "Voyager Returned" and the poet is Barbara Terry Grimes.

Voyager Returned

The stillness of Spring Twilight in New Hampshire
awakes emotion deep within my heart.
Though other Springs in other lands held beauty,
still here I have my roots and knew my start.

The stillness of Spring Twilight in New Hampshire
awakes remembrance known and loved before.
My travels never could too firmly hold me; 
This is my home, my own familiar shore.
 ~ Barbara Terry Grimes

I thought this was such a lovely poem, though realistically, twilight in spring here is not particularly still.  One may hear the whining of mosquitoes and black flies along with the peeping and croaking of frogs, and the sound of rushing water as snowmelt tumbles down seasonal waterfalls and into little rapidly-moving brooks.  However, the poem and the thought behind it are both beautiful!

Tuesday, December 03, 2019

A poem to set our hearts toward Christmas


Browsing through the 1955 Ideals Greetings at Christmas, I found this lovely poem among many others.  Some will be posted on my Christmas blog this month, but I thought I would put this one -- titled "A Litany" and written by Genevieve North -- here.

Here it is:

A Litany

For Yuletide blessings ours each year, 
The snow so pure, the firs so green,
The berries red on the holly wild,
The Star of stars above us seen,
    We give Thee thanks, our Father.

For Christmas carols never old, 
For friends who show good will and love,
For children's hearts akin to Thine
Who gave the Babe from heaven above, 
    We give Thee thanks, our Father.

For all that Christmas does to men
To change their lives and make them strong,
And bring into this world sweet faith
And love enshrined to conquer wrong,
    We give Thee thanks, our Father.

~ Genevieve North

So lovely!  I hope you have enjoyed the read and that it will help set your heart toward this incomparable season and the Reason that we celebrate.

Saturday, May 11, 2019

A lovely poem based on Genesis 8:22


You have seen this Scripture verse more than once on my blog.  I was sharing it just today with my friend Jennifer.

"While the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease."  (Genesis 8:22)

It's a favorite Scripture of mine because no matter how crazy and upside-down things may become in this world of ours, we have this promise from God.  Things may at times seem out of His control, but they never are.  He is always in control.

I don't think it's a coincidence that this afternoon,  as I was scanning more vintage items for sale in my Etsy shop, I came across this poem.  It was in the Ideals Publishing Company's Mother's Day Greetings for 1958.

For Troubled Hearts
by Mrs. Roy L. Peifer

"So long as the earth remaineth
Shall seedtime and harvest come -- "
God in His heaven reigneth
And the earth will turn back to the sun.

Have faith when the days are dreary,
Faith when the nights are long,
Faith when your heart is weary,
Somewhere there waits a song.

Hold hope when the skies are weeping,
Hope when the birds are still,
Under the snow are the roses sleeping --
Spring lieth over the hill.

Keep love unstained and shining
Tho' the road be rough and far,
Each cloud has a silver lining
Where love and lovers are.

"So long as the earth remaineth -- "
Will gray skies turn to blue;
Where faith, hope, and true love reigneth
God's promises all come true!

Is your heart weary today?  Does it seem God has forgotten you?  Does it feel as if spring will never come?  Turn to Genesis 8:22 and be encouraged!

Wednesday, April 17, 2019

A poetic Wednesday Medley

   
Graphic by Abby at Little Birdie Blessings

Another Wednesday, and I'm glad for the opportunity to share in the Wednesday Medley hosted by Terri at Your Friend from Florida.  This is National Haiku poetry day, so why not head over to Terri's and get the the questions to answer them on your own blog?
1.  Haiku poetry is actually pretty easy to write.  Give it a try right here...
 Oh, let's see ...
 Mud season is ugly:  
My driveway's brown and oozy.  
Hope it dries out soon. 
 
2.  Haiku poetry aside, have you ever written a poem?  Will you share it with us?
I have written a few poems.  Here is a link to one of my favorites: A Birthday Moment.
3.  Do you have a favorite poet or does poetry usually make you yawn?
Robert Frost is probably my favorite poet, though there are others I enjoy.  I was just thinking today, for obvious reasons, of these lines from his poem Two Tramps in Mud Time:
"The sun was warm but the wind was chill.
You know how it is with an April day
When the sun is out and the wind is still,
You're one month on in the middle of May.
But if you so much as dare to speak,
A cloud comes over the sunlit arch,
A wind comes off a frozen peak,
And you're two months back in the middle of March."
These lines could not describe today more perfectly!

4.  April 17  is National Ellis Island Family History Day, too,  Did any of your ancestors or relatives immigrate through Ellis Island from another country? 

Not that I know of.  Many of my ancestors immigrated from Scotland, but that was before Ellis Island existed.
5.  We also celebrate National Cheeseball Day on April 17th.  Do you have a favorite cheeseball recipe to share with us or have cheeseballs basically disappeared from parties today?  
Oh, I definitely do have a favorite cheese ball recipe to share.  I usually form it into two logs, though.  Seems easier and is less messy to serve.  It always seems to be well received at gatherings I take it to.  Here's the link: Festive Cheese Log.
Photo from Taste of Home.  It doesn't look exactly like my cheese logs, but close.
6.  If you want to share, please tell us something random about your week. 
 Let's see ... so far it's been pretty chilly.  Windy, too.  And it looks like a busy one, with food to prepare for Easter breakfast at church, and maybe a birthday party thrown in there too!
And so ends a poetic Wednesday Medley.  What a fun theme!

Friday, February 02, 2018

A February Morn



I always enjoy looking through old magazines, and old New Hampshire Troubadours, of which I have a small collection, are some of my favorites.  This poem is one that I found in the February 1948 issue. 

A February Morn
by Grace Wight Buckle

Diamond drops among the pines,
Fragile, fleeting things;
Catching color that outshines
Man-made polishings.

Patter of the melting snow
From bent branches sped;
Gentle showers falling, though 
Blue skies glow o'erhead.

Color crystaled in the green; 
Bird-song, winter-born;
Shadows reach on earth's white sheen -- 
A February morn!

Beautiful, I thought.  So descriptive of a morning in February.


Sunday, December 03, 2017

A Christmas poem ~ "Christmas Splendor"


Some of my recent finds include vintage Ideals magazines in a smaller size for sending to friends.    Envelopes like the one shown above were included with these.  So pretty!  The envelopes are ever so faintly dusted with glitter, although you can't really tell by looking at this scan.

The poem I'm sharing came from the 1956 Ideals "Christmas Greetings".  It's by Lida Shivers Leech.

Christmas Splendor
Lida Shivers Leech

The dawn breaks o'er a beauteous scene,
Quiet, dazzling, and serene;
A wealth of diamonds in the snow
Set hill and vale aglow.

A panorama unsurpassed,
Traced by the Master-hand;
And etched in jewels crystal clear
By nature's magic wand.

A bright-eyed snowbird pecks around
For crumbs or berries red;
With cheery chirp he greets his mate
On icy branch o'erhead.

Christmas splendor-- a spotless robe
On roof, on shrub and tree;
We stand amazed and gaze in awe
On this, God's mystery.

This actually reminds me quite a bit of the type of poems my husband's dad would write.  It does set a beautiful scene.  God is indeed the Master Artist!

Thursday, November 23, 2017

Thankful Heart

Lovely image from Gooseberry Patch
This past spring, while cleaning out an old roll-top desk at my parents' home, I found a folded, yellowed page from the November 24, 1963 This Week magazine.  Some may remember when this magazine came as a supplement with the Sunday newspaper.

The entire page was taken up by a poem titled Thankful Heart, by William Fitzpatrick, a Pulitzer Prize winner for distinguished editorial writing.  He was evidently a poet, too.

Thankful Heart

We thank Thee, Lord,
This hallowed day
For these Thy gifts.
Thanks for the way

The falling leaves
Renew the earth --
Symbol and promise
of Man's rebirth.

Thanks for the fruits
Of field and plow
We planted then
And harvest now.

Thanks for the sea
And summer shade ...
Beauty of sky
And silent glade ...

Thy watchful eye,
As children played.
Thanks for Thy trials
That somehow made

Us more like men.
O Lord, for these
We thank Thee, then
On grateful knees.

By William Fitzpatrick.  Pulitzer Prize winner for distinguished editorial writing.

A beautiful, meaningful poem, I thought.  I see why my mother saved that page from This Week.

Wishing you all a blessed and meaningful Thanksgiving.

Monday, July 31, 2017

Woodland Lake


I think I've mentioned before that I have a small stack of New Hampshire Troubadour magazines that my mother had given me years ago.  I enjoy re-reading them seasonally.  On the back of the July 1950 issue I found the following beautiful poem:

Woodland Lake
by Ruth M. Hill

A mirror lake, within an emerald grove,
Reflecting dark, tall trees with branches low;
The shadows cool and deep, to where below
In quiet back-curve of a little cove,
As in that strange behind-a-mirror place,
The stems of lilies, with a flowing grace
Find root and to the lucid surface grow.
A roving cloud and bird reflected are;
Nor can a storm this mirror break or mar.
Each storm must pass.  And all the tempest tossed
Upon these liquid depths is quickly lost;
The surface scarless, now reflects a star.
A mirror mingling fantasy and scene,
Beneath blue skies a woodland lake serene.

Such a beautiful poem.  I especially like the line, "Each storm must pass.  And all the tempest tossed/Upon these liquid depths is quickly lost." It's very meaningful to me to think of the storm passing, the surface of the lake smoothing out again and then reflecting a star.  Love those thoughts.
I know I have shared all these lake photos before, but didn't identify the lakes.  The top photo is of Echo Lake; the middle one is Newfound Lake, taken from Sugarloaf Mountain; and the bottom photo is of Back Lake.  Hope you all enjoyed this poem as much as I did!

Monday, March 20, 2017

Harbinger of Spring


Although I still haven't written the post about my maple-scented memories (maybe later this week), I am putting together just a simple maple-related post, using some recently discovered vintage items, for the first day of spring.

Lately I've been doing much sorting and decluttering of old keepsakes.  One of my favorite recent finds was the note card above.  I'd be keeping it regardless of the picture on the front, because the note inside was written by a great-aunt I didn't know well.  She was thanking my mother for sending her and my great-uncle a photo of us kids: "What a pretty little group they are."

The note card, though, depicting a hillside sugar house, is just beautiful.  Here's what it says on the back of the card:

"SUGAR HOUSE"
famous for its aroma of maple sugar and 
hickory smoke, is from an original oil
painting by Freddy Peterson, who was born in
Denmark and studied extensively in Europe
before entering the United States in 1924.

The card was a product of Scenic View Cards in Hanover, Massachusetts.

(Do be sure and click to enlarge the card and see the details.)

As I've said before, I grew up with sugaring.   It's an important part of who I am.  So I was just thrilled to find this beautiful note card.  But there was more.

I'm not sure if all states do this (I believe they do) but in New Hampshire the fourth graders get a special emphasis on state history.  That's often the time for field trips to the state house and to the NH Historical Society Museum and so on.  The students have to do some sort of report or research project on state history.

Back in the day (a l-o-n-g time ago) when I was in fourth grade, the requirement was the same.  That may be when it all started, for all I know.  In my elementary school years, educational television was becoming the latest and greatest thing.  With my classmates, I'd leave the classroom on certain days each week and walk down, then across, the street to a different building and file into the basement where we had classes on music, French, and New Hampshire history at varying times.   (From what I recall, the music classes were not on TV.  All I really remember of them was that we had music books and that we learned to sing a lot of songs from them.)  Although the televised teachers did their best to make the state history and the French classes interesting, they did not really hold one's attention.  I suppose that is why I didn't really grasp the importance of either state history or the required project.  I vaguely remember doing much of it at the last minute and not getting a wonderful grade on it.

Fast-forward to my sorting and decluttering spree and I found the report with other keepsakes in an old desk.  There were a number of New Hampshire postcards stapled or taped to the pages, and also a couple of New Hampshire-related poems clipped from a newspaper.  One of the poems, and one of the postcards, are sugaring-related and so I am sharing them in this post.
This  postcard, depicting gathering sap with oxen, was sent to me in 1958
The poem is called Harbinger of Spring and the author simply signed him or herself as "Word Lover."  Here it is:

HARBINGER OF SPRING
It's sugarin' time in New 
     England hills
And that's a sign of spring,
When warmth of sun and 
     wakening life
The magic flow will bring.

The trees are tapped, the 
     pails are hung,
The wood is amply piled,
To keep alive the roaring
     fire
Until the sap is "biled".

The hours of toil are long
     and weary
When sugar' time comes 
     round;
There's many a trip 'tween
     tree and vat ----
But eager joys abound.

After boiling's done, comes
     sugarin' off
And with beautiful amber
     glow
The syrup becomes 
     delicious taffy
When poured on pure white
     snow.

Yes, it's sugarin' time in 
     New England hills --
God's chosen place on earth
Whence comes this wood-
     land nectar rare
Of truly royal worth!

Whoever Word Lover was, I appreciate their poem.  I hope you have enjoyed it -- and the other sweet vintage delights -- as much as I enjoyed finding and sharing them.

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

From the March archives

Gorgeous winter collage (very appropriate today) is by Abby at Little Birdie Blessings
I had so much fun putting together a post from the February archives that I decided to do one for March as well.  Since it's sort of a hodgepodge post, and since there is no Wednesday Hodgepodge this week, I decided to post it on Wednesday.

For March 2008, I found several posts I would like to share with you.  Many of them involve spiritual encouragement, especially for dealing with trials.

Trusting God is based off notes that I took at a women's seminar by Elizabeth George.  I was blessed all over again as I re-read this and some of the other posts.
This is a digital page that Abby at Little Birdie Blessings designed with a friend.
If you can't read the verse, it says, "When my heart is overwhelmed, lead me to the rock that is higher than I ... I will trust in the covert of Thy wings."  The reference is Psalm 61:2, 4.

Bookends is another post based on notes I took at the seminar.  This thought has helped me more often than you can imagine.

God’s Path is the first of several posts I wrote during my study of Elizabeth George's book Finding God's Path Through Your Trials.  I highly recommend this book -- I cannot recommend it highly enough, in fact.  While you are in the March 2008 archives, you will find several more posts concerning this study that you might like to look at.
And then there is this one, featuring a special cross stitch I made for one of my daughters.

For March 2009, I'm linking to a post about some of my paper crafting efforts with these winter tags.
For awhile on my daughter's blog, she was doing a feature called A Homemade Life.  I linked to it and shared homemade goodness for as long as she kept the feature going.  In this post I share my recipes for baked beans and brown bread.  Good, economical comfort food!
For March 2010, I chose two posts: one about my early spring decorating and the other on some fun handmade gifts for kids in Chef’s Hats Galore!
 A prayer for my grandchildren, shared in 2012,  has the distinction of being one of the most popular posts ever on the blog.  Not exactly sure why, but a lot of people have visited it.

In March 2014, Gluten-free Irish Soda Bread was a great discovery for me.  If you must avoid wheat (or simply prefer to) you would love this bread, I'm sure.

Also in 2014 I shared these cute felt play mats I had made for my grandchildren.  They were adorable and a lot of fun to make, but sadly, the hot glue didn't hold up well at all.  Guess I would hand-sew these if I ever made more.  Not that I think I will.
In 2015 I shared the recipe for homemade samoa bars from Jocelyn at Inside BruCrew Life.  They are decadent but scrumptious.

And then from March 2016, I shared info on some vintage camper dish towels that I had made and which a lot of people have asked about.
Putting together this post was a trip down Memory Lane for me.  Hope you've enjoyed it too.

Sunday, May 01, 2016

Poems and a post for the last day of April


Bloodroot ~ one of our first spring wildflowers
I had so many thoughts I wanted to tie together -- a poem I wanted to share (since April was Poetry Month); a walk in the woods; the first wildflowers; the restorative, healing power of time spent in God's creation; even a thought or two about my late father-in-law whose birthday was the last day of April.  Sadly, my thoughts will not even hold together.  I ended up using one poem at the beginning of the post and a second, by a much more local poet, at the end.

The first poem, and the one I have been thinking of sharing all month, is called Gifts from the Wildwood and is by South Carolina poet Archibald Rutledge.

Gifts from the Wildwood

I know not how to capture
This fragrant wildwood's rapture,
The magic of these dells
Where silent beauty dwells,
Where noble strength and power
in oak and pine tree tower.
But when from these I come,
I hope to carry home
Some spirit not yet had
To keep me strong and glad,
Something from oak and pine
To be forever mine;
When from these woods I part,
Some wildflower in my heart.
~ Archibald Rutledge

It is from the last line of this poem that Jamie Langston Turner took the title for her wonderful book,   Some Wildflower in My Heart.  If you have never read this book, I recommend it very highly.  I do not enjoy most Christian fiction; much of it is far too shallow, and my reading time is so limited that I will not waste it starting books and not finishing them.  But Jamie Turner's writing is different.  Each of her books actually has a different voice, yet there is a common thread ~ I guess I would summarize it as the impact we as believers can have in the lives of others if we are truly living as God would have us to.  If you do read Some Wildflower in My Heart, don't be put off by the scholarly tone of Margaret Tuttle, who is telling the story.  She uses large words, slightly formal language, and refers often to books she has read.  But when you get into the story and learn about Margaret's background, you realize why she speaks and writes as she does.  It's a story well worth reading, and Birdie Freeman, whose story Margaret is telling, is an example for all of us to emulate.

Jamie Turner's other books (I believe there are seven more) are also excellent and I highly recommend them.  They can be read as a series, for most share some of the same characters, but they also stand alone very well.

I've gone off track a bit, but wanted to share how this excellent writer has edified me.  The poem above, Gifts from the Wildwood, figures in the story of Birdie Freeman and Margaret.   I loved the poem and found that it really spoke to me, as I have found so often that spending time in the woods or by the water is comforting and healing.

A few weeks ago my daughter mentioned how she and her family took a "mental health day" and went for a hike in the woods adjoining their property.  That sounded appealing to Mr. T and myself, so we asked them to let us know the next time they planned a hike.  A couple of Saturdays ago, we were able to find a few hours to join them.  Below are some scenes from the day:
Josiah is standing inside a cellar hole from an old house or barn.  Imagine building that by hand!
Mr. T and our son-in-law figured there had to be a well near the cellar hole somewhere.  They went looking and found it!
One of the waterfalls we saw
Taking a break by one of the waterfall areas
The sky was gloriously blue!
More of the treetops
Another waterfall
And yet more falling water
There were no wildflowers out yet in the woods that day,  but thankfully there were no black flies either!  And even though none of the trees were leafed out, there is just something about tumbling, rushing water and green, green moss that encourages and refreshes the winter-weary spirit.  We had to shoehorn this hike into a very busy day, but I am so thankful that we did!

As we made our way through the woods at the start of the hike (there was a bit of light-duty bushwhacking before we came onto a logging road), I was pleased that I could recognize some different types of moss and plants to share with the kids.  It reminded me so much of my father-in-law, whose knowledge of the woods greatly exceeded that of anyone I've ever known.   He kept a wildflower list every year as he observed the various flowers coming into bloom.   He also loved waterfalls and cellar holes and he would have so enjoyed that hike.  He was also a locally known poet, and the following lines are from his poem Spring Fever:

When I see the geese returning 
Once again I have a yearning
To walk again some old familiar trail
There to seek some early flower
On some sunny bank or bower, 
Or where the brook meanders through the vale.
...

Find some cellar long forsaken
That the years have overtaken,
Or walk along beside some old stone walls;
Maybe watch the sunlight flashing 
Where the noisy brook is splashing,
And madly dashing o'er the rocky falls.

The above are two of the five stanzas of the poem, and the second could have been describing  the hike we took.  He had surely been on many similar ones.  April 30 would have been his 101st birthday.  He is the one who dug up the original bloodroot plant (last year's blooms pictured at the top of the post) and brought it to my daughter to plant. And it always brings sweet memories when "his" flowers appear in the wildflower garden every spring.

(I am sharing today with Sandi's No Place Like Home and  Bernideen’s Tea Time, Cottage and Garden Blog Party.)

Thursday, December 03, 2015

A fun poem ~ "December Treasures"


I thought I would get December Daily off to a good start for 2015 with a fun poem I found.  As many readers know, I get out my stack of Country Woman issues from years past, every November or December and have fun enjoying their country goodness all over again.  This year I found the poem "December Treasures" on the back cover of the the November/December 2000 issue. The poet is Sylvia Jasperson of Rice Lake, Wisconsin.  Enjoy!

December Treasures

Cookies and candy,
Ribbons and bows,
Warm woolen mittens,
A cherry-red nose,

Bright shiny tinsel
And Christmas tree lights,
A jingle of sleigh bells 
On cold snowy nights,

A plump frosty snowman,
A wreath on the door,
The sweet sound of carols,
And presents galore ...

The sharp scent of pine
Helps me remember
Why of all of the months, 
I treasure December!
~ Sylvia Jasperson

Hope this little poem gets your December off to a merry start!

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

"November" ~ a lovely poem


Vintage postcard from my collection
I found this lovely poem in the Readers' Poetry Corner of the November/December 1987 issue of Country Woman magazine.  It is written by Vivian Rice of Milaca, Minnesota.  Enjoy!

November
A lone gray goose flies overhead;
I hear its distant call.
The trees have lost their gold and red --
We're deep into the fall.

It's time to husk the Indian corn
To decorate the room --
To take the place of fresh-cut flowers
That now no longer bloom.

I've gathered in the last few squash;

The garden looks forlorn.
A rooster pheasant glides across
A field of rustling corn.

Our hearts are filled with thanks to God
For health and joy of living,
For beauty at this time of year,
For harvest and Thanksgiving.
~ Vivian Rice

How beautiful!  What wonderful images and thankful thoughts it conjures up for me ... and I hope for you too.


Friday, October 30, 2015

"When the Birds Go North Again" -- another lovely poem


Photo from Pixabay
I am not sure if this should be categorized as a fall, spring, or even a winter poem.  But I think of it in fall when the birds are leaving for warmer climates.  Sometimes it can make us a bit sad to see the birds leaving and to realize there is a long winter to get through.  But they always come back!  And we know the winter will eventually end.

My mother loved this poem so much that my sister had it done in calligraphy and framed for my mother to display in the living room.  It would make a lovely cross-stitch, too.

When the Birds Go North Again

Oh, every year hath its winter,
    And every year hath its rain
But a day is always coming
    When the birds go North again.
 
When new leaves swell in the forest,
    And grass springs green on the plain,
And the alder's veins turn crimson
    And the birds go North again.
 
Oh, every heart hath its sorrow,
    And every heart hath its pain--
But a day is always coming
    When the birds go North again.
 
'Tis the sweetest thing to remember
   If courage be on the wane,
When the cold dark days are over
    Why, the birds go North again.
__Ella Higginson
 

Nature Pictures by American Poets
Selected and Edited by Annie Russell Marble
(New York: The MacMillan Company. 1899)
Page 75
Isn't this such a lovely, meaningful poem?  I just may think about working up a cross-stitch design for this to help me get through the winter!

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

A Vagabond Song


Oh, what a beautiful poem this is!  I have loved this poem,  by Bliss Carman,  for many years.

A VAGABOND SONG

There is something in the autumn that
   is native to my blood --
Touch of manner, hint of mood;
And my heart is like a rhyme,
With the yellow and the purple and the
   crimson keeping time.

The scarlet of the maples can shake me
   like a cry
Of bugles going by.
And my lonely spirit thrills
To see the frosty asters like a smoke
   upon the hills.

There is something in October sets the
   gipsy blood astir;
We must rise and follow her,
When from every hill of flame
She calls and calls each vagabond
    by name.
~ Bliss Carman

The "scarlet of the maples" is particularly beautiful this year.  The red trees grab our attention every time.  And the "frosty asters" do look like lavender-blue smoke.

In New England we are blessed to see this glorious display of color every year.  We never tire of it or take it for granted.  And speaking for Mr. T and myself, the beautiful colors and the blue-sky days call us to explore the countryside round about us once again. 




Friday, October 09, 2015

"Something Told the Wild Geese" -- a lovely autumn poem


Photo from Photos Public Domain
My mother had another favorite fall poem which I will share today.  I'm not sure where my mother first heard the poem, but I imagine it may have been in the one-room schoolhouse of her childhood.

 I had thought that this poem was in Favorite Poems Old and New, an anthology edited by Helen Ferris, which was a great favorite book in our home when I was growing up.

However, it is not there.  Our family also owned a book called One Thousand Beautiful Things, subtitled A Collection of Prose and Poetry Chosen from the World's Literature and compiled by Marjorie Barrows. That is where I located this poem, which may also be found at various online sources.   I was blessed a number of years ago to find a copy of One Thousand Beautiful Things at a book sale.  It is well worth having in your family's library if you ever come across it.

Here's the poem:

SOMETHING TOLD THE WILD GEESE
by Rachel Field

Something told the wild geese
    It was time to go.
Though the fields lay golden
    Something whispered, -- "Snow."
Leaves were green and stirring,
    Berries, luster-glossed,
But beneath warm feathers
    Something cautioned, -- "Frost."
All the sagging orchards
    Steamed with amber spice,
But each wild breast stiffened
    At remembered ice.
Something told the wild geese
   It was time to fly, --
Summer sun was on their wings,
    Winter in their cry.

That's where we are today.  The sun feels warm and summery, but we already have heard the cry of the wild geese as they get ready to migrate.  And of course we know it is not "something" that tells them to go, but it is "Someone" who has placed this knowledge within them.

A beautiful poem, don't you think?