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GODS
WORLD AND FALL
Fall is definitely in the air. Though most of the leaves are still green,
they are beginning to rustle. I enjoy watching the season come bit by
bit. "This Is My Fathers World," committed to memory during
years of hymn singing, spins around in my head-beautiful and loved.
On the back of one of my favorite photographs, made about ten years ago
from the back porch looking west just as the sun went down behind the
trees around the lake, I wrote "The sun goes down on my world."
Two things about this caption bother me. One, though the land records
may show this to be our property, I know that "This Is My Fathers
World." As many have gone before us, so many shall come after us
to occupy this particular spot of ground. Also, I am bothered to think
I could view this as the limit of my world. Many places and people lie
far beyond this view.
We do not have to travel away from home to see things of interest and
beauty. Many of my favorite places are on the back roads near home-although
the ice storm and harvesting of timber have taken their toll in many areas.
I enjoy riding these roads time after time. On some of these I have stopping
places where the views are breathtaking and the solitude is refreshing.
I like being alone with God, just letting the beauty of nature flood my
being. I can spend little or much time with Him and feel cleansed of anxieties,
frustrations, disappointments, and limitations I may be experiencing.
Many of the roads, though now numbered, are unnamed, unidentified to strangers
and identified to those in the area by the names of some feature, some
family, or some event on that road. (My children were fascinated by the
story of how Peddlers Field Road got its name and loved to take friends
from town therethe closer to dark it was, the better they liked
it.)
Another of the childrens favorite spots was the "road with
the barn hanging over it." Actually through the years the embankment
of the road had washed away, leaving a part of the barn almost extending
over a bit of the road. This was located at the home of Mr. Will and Mr.
Fred Turpin. When I think of the Turpins, I think also of Mr. Harry Turpin
and the tall tales he told, making real-life occurrences sound like tales
handed down by generations. I think too of how he was known for holding
court while he was Beat Four Justice of the Peace sitting in the janitors
closet at the courthouse on an upturned bucket with his court docket on
his knees.
When Bob and Beth lived away, each time they came for a visit Beth took
a ride over her favorite roads. She especially liked the fall, and, when
she was away. I could hardly enjoy this season without missing her sorely
In Houma, Louisiana, where they were living, there were no hills and very
few pretty trees.
On a visit before Bob and Beth moved here, I realized Bob had gone out
the front door and lingered outside. I went to the door and inquired if
there was a problem. He replied, "No, Im just listening to
the quiet. And you know, the stars are even brighter out here." The
quiet can be profound.
I take special pleasure in the common-place beauty of our rural countryside.
Once, as I was admiring a thicket of thistles, I thought how lovely they
were and what a beautiful arrangement they would make. I prevailed upon
Don to help me gather these. As he was cutting them with the long-handled
pruning shears, he was mumbling something. I asked what he was saying.
He replied, "I have fought thistles all my life. I never dreamed
I would ever be cutting them for a bouquet." My arrangement of thistles
caused quite a stir at church that Sunday. "What! thistles in the
sanctuary of the Clear Creek Church!" Even in a pestering plant,
one which defies being touched, God has placed beauty for us to capture.
A few years ago I discovered oak leaf hydrangeas on one of the gravel
roads. These are gorgeous in their first white bloom and then as they
mature and dry into hues of mauve and brown. When I filled the fire place
with a massive arrangement of these, I got an excellent photograph and
exclamations of admiration from family and friends, many of whom wanted
to gather bouquets for their own homes. My cousin Betty Johnson and her
friend Bonnie Curtis, my sister Ava, and Beth made trips to the Hydrangeas
with me, and with each trip the flowers got harder and harder to reach.
Queen Anne's lace is another one of my favorite wild plants. Many lovely
arrangements of roses have been enhanced by their lacy beauty. Occasionally
I am disappointed by the appearance of a wildflower after I get it inside.
Don tells me they are not intended for inside. They need to be surrounded
by other wild plants and in their natural element.
Many years ago after we built our house I wanted a mural on a dining room
wall. The necessary lighting was roughed in. The artist I had spoken with
came and we rode about over the farm as I showed her some of my favorite
spots. She was kind and looked at everything. As I talked, she deduced
I wanted almost all of creation. She then explained that when I saw a
spot which tugged at me I was seeing acres and acres all blending. She
felt I would be disappointed if we attempted to narrow it down to one
wall.
I seems to me the moon rises and glows more gloriously in the country.
I stand and look at it in amazement realizing God has permitted men to
walk there. I am touched by the beauty of our world in the night time.
I would like to be able to identify all of the creatures that make sounds
only for one night. The frogs on the lake call out then they are answered.
The tree frogs seem to literally fill the air. The crickets chime in.
The whippoorwill, speaking his own name, calls out and lets us know it
is cotton-planting time.
The country landscape is dotted with signs of activity. When we built
our house on the spot of Don's grandparent's home, we were asked why we
did not tear down the barn on the north side and the broiler house just
to the south of the garden. (I think now time will take care of removing
these.) Don's reply was to the effect that without the barn and the chicken
house our house would not be here.
When I realized recently that Don was putting his long-needed equipment
shed on the right side of the road where it would come into view as you
round the curve, I tried in vain to persuade him to put it back some and
over into the pasture. He said surely there was no reason to put equipment
out of sight. It is part of the landscape. Like the barn and the chicken
house, it belongs just where it is. The equipment shed, along with those
of our neighbors the Crowes and Bobby Gene Briscoe, stand as symbols of
the profession of farming, reaffirming to all that pass that people are
continuing to till the soil, still providing for needs through the use
of God's world. He permits us to be his stewards. What an awesome responsibility.
In a conspicuous spot in my kitchen I have a piece of needlework chosen
from a beautiful selection offered to me by Susie James when she was employed
by the Oxford Eagle, which says: "Who plants the sod and waits to
see believes in God." How can we not believe with the beauty and
miracles of nature?
Another reminder of the beauty of God's world is the children's chorus:
"God's beautiful world, God's beautiful world. I love god's beautiful
world. He made it for you. He made it for me. I love God's beautiful world."
I don't believe I will ever get too old to enjoy the singing of this little
verse.
Nostalgia come to me with the fallespecially late in the afternoons.
I remember the people, places, and activities that have been important
to me. When I was a child, doing the "night work" brought our
day to a close. I usually brought in the wood fore the cook stove and
brother Jim, who was older than I, got the fireplace wood and kindling
during the fall and winter. We had other chores too, depending upon the
season of the year.
Jim always whistled as we worked. The neighbors several hills over, the
Macus James family, told how they knew when "jimmy Houston"
was doing his chores because they could hear his loud clear whistling.
. I always thought his whistling skill was developed to such excellence
during the years when, after suffering a severe case of whooping cough
as a child, he could barely be heard when he tried to talk. Dr. Guyton
said that nothing could be done and that Jim would recover his voice to
some extent as year went on. He did, though as a an adult he still had
a slight hoarseness.
The beauty of the sights and sounds may be obscured to those working their
way through grief, and we at the funeral home try to be ever mindful of
this walk through the shadows. We want to be ever so sensitive to the
hurt in our contacts with those who have lost loved ones.
As Don and I ride over the state, I am impressed with the very diverse
geographic makeup of the state. From the shores of the Gulf, through the
rich black soil of the delta, into the hills, then the prairie land and
the hills, we find it all beautiful and never more so than in the fall.
I watch for the churches (I can often tell the denomination before I see
the sign.) and for the cemeteries. I think of how people throughout the
countryside live now and of how people have lived in the past, and I also
think of what is happening back at home. Sometimes, especially late in
the fall afternoons, I feel that same homesickness I felt late in the
afternoon as a child when far away from home. I have a small album of
favorite photos of each family member, group photos, and favorite around-home
scenes that I keep with me always that gives me some comfort.
I also find comfort in the words of the hymn ("I rest me in the thought")
"That though the wrong seems oft so strong God is the ruler yet."
Writing about God's world--my own spots, home sites and plants--brings
the urge to again drive slowly over each road and once more to receive
that blessing only my heavenly father can give as he and I go together.
I read today the Psalms of Praise and I think again of my favorite line
from the Hymn about my father's world, "in the rustling grass I hear
Him pass, He speaks to me everywhere."
I am indeed thankful for the beauty of God's world, for his presence in
all of nature, and for the friends and family who share this beautiful
world.
Sincerely,
Patsy
NATURE
AND LIFE
Those homelier wildflowers, which we call weeds; yellow japanned buttercups
and star-disked dandelions, lying in the grass, like sparks that have
leaped from the kindling sun of summer; the profuse daisy-like flower
which whitens the fields, to the great disgust of liberal shepherds, yet
seems fair to loving eyes, with its button-like mound of gold set round
with milk-white rays; the tall-stemmed succory, setting its pale blue
flowers aflame one after another; the red and white clovers; the broad
flat leaves of the plantain--the white mans foot," as the Indians
called it--those common growths which fling themselves to be crushed under
our feet and our wheels, making themselves so cheap in this perpetual
martyrdom that we forget, each of them is a ray of the divine beauty.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
The staunchest tree is not found in the shelter of the forest, but out
in the open where the winds from every quarter beat upon it and bend and
twist it until it becomes a giant in stature--this is the tree which
the mechanic wants his tools made of, and the wagon-maker seeks.
So in the spiritual world, when you see a giant, remember the road you
must travel to come to his side is not along the sunny lane where wildflowers
ever bloom; but a steep, rocky, narrow pathway where the blasts of hell
will almost blow you off your feet; where the sharp rocks cut the flesh,
where the projecting thorns scratch the brow, and the venomous beasts
hiss on every side.
E. A. Kilbourne
From: Streams in the Desert, Vol. 1
by: Mrs. Charles E. Cowman
Several cotton farmers were whiling away a winter afternoon around the
cannonball stove, when they became entangled in a heated discussion on
the merits of their respective religions.
One of the farmers had been sitting quietly, just listening, and the group
turned on him and demanded, "Whos right, Old Jim? Which one
of these religions is the right one?"
"Well," said Jim thoughtfully, "you know there are three
ways to get from here to the cotton gin. You can go over the big hill.
Thats shorter, but its a powerful climb. You can go around
the east side of the hill. Thats not too far, but the road is roughern
tarnation. Then, you can go around the west side of the hill, which is
the longest way, but the easiest."
"But you know, he pronounced, looking them squarely in the
eyes, "When you get there, the gin man dont ask you how you
come. He just asks you, Man, how good is your cotton?"
Source unknown
AN
INVITATION
We invite you to visit us at the Funeral Home. We would like to show you
our improved facilities and to talk with you about our services.
If you would like to talk about preplanning or pre-arrangement, we will
help you consider plans available and suitability for your particular
circumstances. Preplanning can consist of specifying a few of your wishes
or of making detailed plans about funeral services and does not always
include any prepayment. Flexible pre-arrangement plans are available
with options for payment in full, time-payment, and insurance-funded
payment. Preplanning and pre-arrangement free your loved ones from making
decisions and payment in difficult circumstances, ensure that your wishes
will be known at the time of your death, and hedge against inflation by
locking in costs. There will be no high pressure or obligation--just a
chat about how thoughtful consideration of the future can provide peace
of mind to you and your family.
The addition we made to the Funeral Home last year has provided more privacy
and comfort for those we serve. The new arrangements room is attractive
and spacious, some offices have been extended, and the selection of burial
supplies and equipment has been enlarged and arranged in a more organized
way.
You are invited to look over the library which we have assembled and to
borrow any of the books there. Many of the books deal with death and grief,
some with special application for circumstances such as suicide, the
death of an infant, the death of a spouse. Some offer help in dealing
with critical illness and with guilt and loneliness. Special attention
is given in several of the books to helping children and young people
deal with death and grief. A few of the books are simply books of prayers
and meditations.
We try to maintain a home-like atmosphere at the Funeral Home, and we
would welcome a visit from you. Please give us a call (662-234-7971) to
make sure the facilities and personnel will be available at the time you
plan to come.
Chinese
Proverb
(2500 BC)
When the sun rises,
I go to work,
When the sun goes down,
I take my rest
I farm the soil
Which yields my food.
I share Creation;
Kings can do no more.
Staff
Changes
Eyon Alan Brownlee joined the staff at Waller Funeral Home in September.
He successfully completed the National Board exam and earned a degree
in Mortuary Science from Northwest Community College in 1994. He is involved
in all aspects of funeral service at the Funeral Home as he completes
the required one-year internship under licensed supervision in preparation
for appearing before the State Board of Funeral Service for licensing
in Funeral Service.
Evon is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Brownlee, of Senatobia. He graduated
from Magnolia Heights High School, in Senatobia, in 1992. He is a member
of the Looxahoma Church of Christ in Senatobia. Eyon says he chose to
work in funeral service because he wants to serve the public, to be helpful
in the community, and to help people through their hardest times.
We welcome Eyon into the Waller Funeral Home "Family." Sid Wolfe
has retired from full-time work at the Funeral Home although he will still
work on a part-time and on-call basis. Sid has worked at the Funeral Home
since February of 1990. We will miss seeing him regularly. We extend our
best wishes to him and Bonnie as they have more time for visiting with
the grandchildren and enjoying other activities and leisure.
IN MEMORIAM
We dedicate this issue of Seasons to those who
died and whose families we served from July 9 through October 22, 1994.
Mr. Neil Lloyd Coleman 07/09/94
Mrs. Glennys Marr Davis 07/15/94
Mr. David Lynwood Hudson 07/15/94
Mrs. Ressie Cearley Malone 07/18/94
Mrs. Edna May "Susie" Gerred 07/18/94
Mrs. Mary Ann Kesler 07/22/94
Mr. Henry Horace Tuttle 07/23/94
Mrs. Lillie Mae Moore 07/26/94
Mrs. Alice Marie Coaten 07/26/94
Mrs. Dorothy Elizabeth "Betsy" Bailey 07/27/94
Mrs. Jessie Rea Ledbetter 07/28/94
Mrs. Geraldine Pankratz "Gerry" Duvall 08/04/94
Mr. Raymond Jerome Vechinski 08/06/94
Mrs. Mildred Patterson Cavanaugh 08/06/94
Mrs. Margaret Fox Brown 08/11/94
Mr. Boyce Garlon Bratton 08/15/94
Mrs. Marlene Cost Champion 08/16/94
Mrs. Carmen Roberts Frazier 08/18/94
Mr. Burlan Mathew Sanders 08/20/94
Miss Mary Nell Roberts 08/23/94
Mr. Jack Lester Moore 08/25/94
Mrs. Oma Starnes Lauderdale 08/29/94
Mrs. Katie Estell Sessions 08/30/94
Mr. Joe Oliver Nicholas 09/01/94
Mr. James Flemon Cook 09/06/94
Dr. Richard Chester Shivers 09/07/94
Mr. John Hiram Cooper 09/11/94
Josie LeighAnn Smith 09/12/94
Mr. Leland Ellis Addington 09/13/94
Mrs. Allie Turpin Hensley 09/13/94
Mr. James Robert Chapman 09/14/94
Mrs. Eunice Davis Hipp 09/14/94
Miss Irene Walker 09/15/94
Charles Jacob McKinney 09/15/94
Mrs. Lelia Cook Mahan 09/18/94
Mr. Joseph Cerny 09/21/94
Mrs. Hilda Perkins Greene 09/23/94
Mrs. Serena Starnes Daniels 09/25/94
Mr. Robert Lynn Frierson, Jr. 09/25/94
Mrs. Linda Faye Alexander 09/27/94
Mrs. Loche Ferrell White 09/27/94
Mr. Harvey Tyler Sandefer 10/06/94
Mr. Samuel Ora "OB." Watts 10/14/94
Mr. Leland Watson 10/15/94
Dr. Alfred Eugene "Gene" Lee 10/15/94
Mrs. Audrey Palmer Mize 10/16/94
Miss Sudie Mayfield 10/16/94
Mr. James Arthur "Scrap" McCain 10/21/94
Mr. Hollis Franklin 10/22/94
The
Double Gift
The African boy listened carefully as the teacher explained why it is that
Christians give presents to each other on Christmas day. "The gift
is an expression of our joy over the birth of Jesus and our friendship for
each other," she said.
When Christmas day came, the boy brought the teacher a sea shell of lustrous
beauty. "Where did you ever find such a beautiful shell?" the
teacher asked as she gently fingered the gift.
The youth told her that there was only one spot where such extraordinary
shells could be found. When he named the place, a certain bay several miles
away, the teacher was left speechless.
"Why... why, its gorgeous... wonderful, but you shouldnt
have gone all that way to get a gift for me."
His eyes brightening, the boy answered, "Long walk part of gift."
Gerald Horton Bath
HOLIDAY GREETINGS
Too soon for holiday greetings? Perhaps-- but this is the last issue of
Seasons before next year and we do not want this special time of the year
to pass without sending our heart-felt holiday greetings. We hope this season
will be one of joy and peace for you and your family.
We are always mindful at this time of the year of those who are experiencing
sorrow because of the death of a loved one. We will send a pamphlet. After
the Loss... Coving with the Holidays, and an article relating to the first
Christmas since the death of a loved one to members of families we have
served since last Christmas. If you know of someone else you think might
benefit from these, please let us know.
Our wish for each of you is Gods presence in your heart and life in
these days. Truly, God is good and blesses us by His presence whatever our
circumstances.
THIS
IS MY FATHERS WORLD
This is my Father's world,
And to my list'ning ears,
All nature sings,
and round me rings
The music of the spheres.
This is my Father's world,
I rest me in the thought
Of rocks and frees,
of skies and seas:
His hand the wonders wrought.
This is mv Fathers world,
The birds their carols raise;
The morning light,
the lily white
Declare their Makers praise.
This is my Fathers world,.
He shines in all thats fair;
In the rustling grass
I hear Him pass,
He speaks to me everywhere.
This is my Fathers world,
0 let me neer forget
That though the wrong
seems oft so strong,
God is the Ruler yet.
This is my Fathers world,
The battle is not done,
Jesus who died
s/tall be satisfied.
And earth and heaven be one.
Maltbie D. Babcock (copyright 1901
by Charles Scribners Sons)
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