South of Broad

The gardens of Charleston were mysteries
walled away in ivied jewel boxes
emitting their special fragrances over high walls.

[Pat Conroy]

BroadStroll down the sidewalk on the front cover of South of Broad [Pat Conroy, 2009]. Continue around the spine and across the back cover. Then, in your mind, cross King Street and stand in front of Number 38 South Battery. I lived there for a couple of years during the late 60s. I may not have judged this book by its cover but I did buy it because of its cover. I was enchanted by Charleston.

The story in this book is told through a narrator about an odd collection of people who create a bond of friendship that lasts through the years. There is action, intrigue, danger, love, hate, twists and turns. It held my attention.

The descriptive parts of this book took me back to a place I loved. The social divisions depicted in this book had less of a draw on my memories since I was an outsider with no desire to become an insider. One time, my landlady invited me to tea with her friends—all of them were Charlestonians to the last corpuscle. When she introduced me, she laughed and added that the cannon in the park pointed to her porch because she was harboring a Yankee. Then she apologized for the fact that I worked for a living as a Navy nurse—in her world, a genteel lady didn’t work for a living especially in a profession as low as nursing, nor did she associate herself with the military. I smiled and decided it would be best if I didn’t tell them I had an uncle who was with Sherman when he marched through South Carolina. The group gave no hint that I was socially unacceptable. Like Charleston, they were gracious to the last tip of the tea cup.

That brings me to the part I liked the least about the book. I’ve been a lot of places and met a lot of people over many years, but I have never met people who acted or talked with each other like the characters in this book. They are such a mean-spoken, foul-mouth bunch that their loving, lasting bonds seem unrealistic. I only believed they cared about each other because the narrator said they did.

If you like southern stories chocked full of angst, do read this book. Better yet, take the book along if you visit Charleston. There is a lyrical description near the end that you could use as a travel guide. Walk the route Leo took when he delivered papers.

Number 38 South Battery

Number 38 South Battery

Lincoln Star Quilt

When life throws you scraps, make a quilt.
[Author Unknown]


I’ve spent the summer finishing projects (some of which I started over thirty years ago). Here is Toby holding down my latest quilt top. I call it “Lincoln Star.” If anyone knows its real name, do let me know. Since I’m hand quilting two quilt tops already, this one is going to a lady who does lovely machine quilting so it can be finished before I’m 110.

See the braided rug in Toby’s photo? My grandma made that with scraps of fabric. She could make pretty and useful things out of next to nothing.

Seeds of Happiness

The greater part of our happiness or misery
depends on our dispositions,
and not on our circumstances.
We carry the seeds of the one or the other
about with us in our minds wherever we go.

[Martha Washington]

I receive an email every Monday from the Story Circle Network. It offers three journal writing prompts for the week—it helps get the creative writing juices flowing. The quotation above is one from this week. It struck a cord with me.

Martha lost a young daughter to epilepsy. She lost a young son to disease when he served in the Continental Army at Yorktown. She spent years rarely seeing her husband since he was leading the patriot forces in the Revolutionary War. There were ample reasons for her to be sad and lonely. She shows us that, just because there is a reason, you don’t have to cave in to misery.

Some folks see life as something that happens to them. Other folks understand that they have far more control over their lives than one might think. I find that I am happier when I guard the door to my mind. I filter information. I refocus my thoughts when they go awry. I try to follow Paul’s advice:

…whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honorable, 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

Keeping Busy

You owe it to everyone you love (including yourself)
to find pockets of tranquility in your busy world.

[Author Unknown]

I’m working on piecing another quilt that I started a couple of decades ago. This one is going to take awhile—a couple of weeks at least. Meanwhile, I’m also gathering patterns, etc. for the fall classes I’m planning to teach at Sarah Jane’s Yarn Shop. Two are coming up in August.

Jacob’s Ladder

Tags

Any day spent sewing, is a good day.
[Author Unknown]

HOT OFF THE MACHINE—I finished sewing the border onto this quilt top this morning. This was another UFO (unfinished object), and now it is ready to go to the quilter. I do hand quilting but, in the spirit of getting this quilt finished, I’m sending it to a lady who does a lovely job with a quilting machine. That will free me up to finish hand quilting two more quilts that I started a number of years ago. My furry buddy, Toby, held the quilt top down while I took the photo. I’ll get a better photo after it is quilted and bound.

February Socks

The greatest treasures are those invisible to the eye
but found by the heart.

EVEN HOTTER OFF THE NEEDLES—These socks are from the “February Sock” pattern in my CD book, …and a time to knit stockings. It is fun to use a variegated yarn when knitting Fair Isle.

These are part of my banish UFOs campaign. I’m also working on piecing a quilt that I started almost two decades ago.

Walnut Brown Socks

Socks might seem like common and simple things,
but when knit with love and imagination
they can say, “I love you.”

HOT OFF THE NEEDLES—These were knit using a cotton-synthetic blend that feels soft and elastic. They are a variation of the Gansey sock pattern featured in the sock workshop above. These use a cable and pine tree texture pattern but are the same basic sock.

…and other joys—Quilt Making

Good friends are like quilts.
They age with you yet never lose their warmth.

My friend, Ruth, is flying to Florida this weekend to celebrate her nephew’s wedding. She’d planned to make a king-sized wedding quilt for the couple ever since last fall. One challenge after another intruded on her plans and time grew short so she let me help her piece the quilt. For two weeks, we worked in a flurry of activity and finished in time.

It has been a long time since I set aside my knitting needles and sewed on a quilt. When I returned from North Carolina, I hurried to Ruth’s to see the finished quilt before she took it away. Wow. The quilting and finishing made it even grander.

This project was not only fun—it was a joy to work on a quilt with my friend.

More Vacation

In every out-thrust headland,
in every curving beach,
in every grain of sand
there is the story of the earth.

[Rachel Carson]

The photo is Battery Buchanan at Fort Fisher. Only part of this North Carolina costal fort remains. The rest has washed into the Atlantic. One of the last battles in the Civil War was fought here. We toured the fort the day we visited friends on the beach near Wilmington. Lovely place. I’ll write more when I return home.

Vacation

If we would only give, just once, the same amount of reflection
to what we want to get out of life that we give to
the question of what to do with a two weeks’ vacation,
we would be startled at our false standards and
the aimless procession of our busy days.

[Dorothy Canfield Fisher]

Ah.  A road trip. I have a feeling that an eight year old boy and a grandmother might be the best possible traveling companions. I’m looking forward to a week of driving through Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina. We’re off to Grandpa’s then to Uncle Jamie and Aunt Bev’s. Hope to visit on the beach as well.