Friday, December 31, 2010
Thursday, December 30, 2010
A World with Frost
I would love to go back and photograph PEI in the winter time. For now, I must do with with the similarities
that my own homeland shares with our sister in Canada. We had a rogue snowfall here on Christmas Day.
This photo was taken in Salisbury, North Carolina.
Labels:
Anne of Green Gables
Friday, December 24, 2010
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Friday, December 10, 2010
Winter Quote from Anne of Green Gables
"She had a good sleep that night and and awakened in the morning to find herself and the world transformed. It had snowed softly and thickly all through the hours of darkness and the beautiful whiteness, glittering in the frosty sunshine, looked like a mantle of charity cast over all the mistakes and humiliations of the past."
A photo of one of my LMM early editions of "The Story Girl".
This book is in better shape than other early editions that I own by LM Montgomery
There is an inscription on the inside frontispiece that reads:
"Josephine from Lula - Christmas 1926"
Just think, Maud was still living during the year of that Christmastime....
It's a shame that beloved books have to get yellow and faded...
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Christmas Tea Time for Anne
Anne book photograph is taken from "The Anne of Green Gables Treasury" |
Another Green Gables book by the same authors |
Labels:
Christmas Anne of Green Gables
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
The Truce of Night by Lucy Maud Montgomery
A 5:00 World in New Bern, North Carolina |
The Truce of Night
Lo, it is dark,
Save for the crystal spark
Of a virgin star o'er the purpling lea,
Or the fine, keen, silvery grace of a young
Moon that is hung
O'er the priest-like firs by the sea;
Lo, it is still,
Save for the wind of the hill,
And the luring, primeval sounds that fill
The moist and scented air¬
'Tis the truce o' night, away with unrest and care!
Now we may forget
Love's fever and hate's fret,
Forget to-morrow and yesterday;
And the hopes we buried in musky gloom
Will come out of their tomb,
Warm and poignant and gay;
We may wander wide,
With only a wish for a guide,
By heath and pool where the Little Folk bide,
We may share in fairy mirth,
And partake once more in the happy thoughts of earth.
Lo, we may rest
Here on her cradling breast
In the wonderful time of the truce o' night,
And sweet things that happened long ago,
Softly and slow,
Will creep back to us in delight;
And our dreams may be
Compact of young melody,
Just such as under the Eden Tree,
'Mid the seraphim's lullabies,
Eve's might have been ere banished from Paradise.
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Labels:
Poetry Lucy Maud Montgomery
Monday, November 15, 2010
Post Cards from Maud's Island
After returning home from PEI I soon discovered that the pixels on my new camera were set too low for quality photos. Thereby, my PEI photos--though not completely spoiled---could have turned out better.
My new hobby is to buy very cheap photo frames at yard sales and then try to tweak my most sentimental
photos into something pretty in order to frame them to the walls in my apartment.
So, I've been working with the PEI photos trying to transform them to what they should have been.
Not 100%, but not bad either. I may create these in to postcards for my Kindred friends at Christmas.
I feel that I am meant to return to PEI to try again. Oh, may it be so!!
Labels:
Lucy Maud Montgomery,
PEI
Monday, November 8, 2010
Maud's "little knack" and her advice to aspiring writers
Drawing by Michael Osterhus
On Facebook I saw a drawing that my son (an Art Student) made of a an alarm clock and a dial with some of the numbers missing. It was interesting, and it made me not uncomfortable (being a person afflicted with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder)
Anyway, as most things do, the picture made me think of Maud and chronology and the precision and rhythm in her writing. Her method ticks in rhythm just like a clock. I like the way she writes. I like it a lot.
She got me from "hello" in the first paragraph of Anne of Green Gables. See how it ticks in a rhythmic fashion (it doesn't flow, not to me it doesn't flow--oh no! --it ticks with rhythm)
"Mrs. Rachel Lynde lived just where the Avonlea main road dipped down into a little hollow, fringed with alders and ladies' eardrops and traversed by a brook that had its source away back in the woods of the old Cuthbert place; it was reputed to be an intricate, headlong brook in its earlier course through those woods, with dark secrets of pool and cascade; but by the time it reached Lynde's Hollow it was a quiet, well-conducted little stream, for not even a brook could run past Mrs. Rachel Lynde's door without due regard for decency and decorum; it probably was conscious that Mrs. Rachel was sitting at her window, keeping a sharp eye on everything that passed, from brooks and children up, and that if she noticed anything odd or out of place she would never rest until she had ferreted out the whys and wherefores thereof." (AoGG, Chapter 1))
So on to the other purpose of my post. A friend on the List sent me an article that Maud wrote to the Dalhousie U concerning advice to aspiring writers. The bottom line? "Have something to say."
So I'm guessing there is more to that story. I'm guessing "Have something to say and then make it tick!"
Labels:
Maud Montgomery,
On writing
Saturday, November 6, 2010
"9LoLMM" - Maud's Birthday In Cavendish
My Kindred buddy, Adam Michael James, mentions me in this video tour of Cavendish which was filmed last November 30th on Maud's birthday.
Labels:
Lucy Maud Montgomery
November - "The Queen's Class is Organized"
"It was nearly dark, for the full November twilight had fallen around Green Gables, and the only light in the kitchen came from the dancing red flames in the stove."
Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery
Labels:
Anne of Green Gables
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Rainbow Valley & Rosemary West
My dear old friend works as a a clerk in a used book shop down in Florida. He sends me things. Recently, he found the frontispiece from an early edition of "Rainbow Valley" stuffed in the bottom of a box. He almost threw it away. Instead, he thought of me and mailed the page along with some other interesting Victorian pieces.
So very Maudish!
"Rosemary West stepped aside from the by-path and stood in that spell-weaving place." |
My dear old friend works as a a clerk in a used book shop down in Florida. He sends me things. Recently, he found the frontispiece from an early edition of "Rainbow Valley" stuffed in the bottom of a box. He almost threw it away. Instead, he thought of me and mailed the page along with some other interesting Victorian pieces.
So very Maudish!
Labels:
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Saturday, October 16, 2010
OCTOBER - "The moon of falling leaves"
Pumpkin Patch - Christ Episcopal Church, New Bern, NC |
Saturday, Oct. 12, 1895
How fast "the moon of falling leaves" is slipping away.
The Selected Journals of LM Montgomery, Vol I, p. 146, Rubio & Waterston
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Friday, October 11, 1889
...The maple leaves are just splendid now. I picked my basket full and then just roamed around, having a fine time in spite of an impertinent little shower that came pattering down, making the maples overhead rustle like silvery music. I just love the woods....
The Selected Journals of LM Montgomery, Vol. I p. 2, Rubio & Waterston
________________________________________________________
Saturday, October. 8, 1898
The "moon of falling leaves" again! How swiftly it comes around from year to year, each year seeming swifter than the last.
The Selected Journals of LM Montgomery, Vol I, p. 225, Rubio & Waterston
_______________________________________________________________
OCTOBER was a beautiful month at Green Gables, when the birches in the hollow turned as golden as sunshine and the maples behind the orchard were royal crimson and the wild cherry trees along the lane put on the loveliest shades of dark red and bronzy green, while the fields sunned themselves in aftermaths.
Anne reveled in the world of color about her.
"Oh, Marilla," she exclaimed one Saturday morning, coming dancing in with her arms full of gorgeous boughs" 'I'm so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers. It would be terrible if we just skipped from September to November, wouldn't it? Look at these maple branches. Don't they give you a thrill--several thrills? I'm going to decorate my room with them."
Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery, Chapter XVI
OCTOBER was a beautiful month at Green Gables, when the birches in the hollow turned as golden as sunshine and the maples behind the orchard were royal crimson and the wild cherry trees along the lane put on the loveliest shades of dark red and bronzy green, while the fields sunned themselves in aftermaths.
Anne reveled in the world of color about her.
"Oh, Marilla," she exclaimed one Saturday morning, coming dancing in with her arms full of gorgeous boughs" 'I'm so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers. It would be terrible if we just skipped from September to November, wouldn't it? Look at these maple branches. Don't they give you a thrill--several thrills? I'm going to decorate my room with them."
Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery, Chapter XVI
Labels:
Lucy Maud Montgomery,
October
Friday, October 1, 2010
Heathcliff, Briarcliffe, An Evening with Wuthering Heights
Labels:
Lucy Maud,
Wuthering Heights
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Lucy Maud and Bayard: My two mentors at opposite ends of the pole
1941
July 8, 1941
"Oh God, such an end to life. Such suffering and wretchedness".
The Selected Journals of LM Montgomery, Vol. V., Rubio & Waterston
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Louisiana House, New Bern, North Carolina |
Bayard Wootten Photograph ____________________________________________________ |
Labels:
Bayard Wootten,
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Monday, September 27, 2010
Maud writes for "The Daily Echo"
Synchronicity
Last week (around the time that I received the Halifax packet) a full Harvest moon appeared in the night sky over North Carolina. Thereby, my camera and I headed down to the river in an attempt to capture the beauty of the moment. However, I know nothing about night photography and the flash of the camera got in the way. The result was not good. The flash just overtakes the image when it bounces off of the leafiness of the trees The moon recedes in importance. I wonder what Maud is saying about leafiness. She isn't very clear with her point.
For a period of time during Maud's stay in Halifax she was employed as a newspaper woman by the Halifax Daily Echo. The assignment was to write a sassy column for the Echo which was titled "Around the Table" by Cynthia.
In Cynthia's column Maud has fabricated (?) some characters who maintain daily interactions and conversations about some pretty mundane subjects. One of the mundane subjects that tickled my funny bone was the day that Polly "straightened out her top bureau drawer."
I think it would be a splendid idea to have top bureau drawers fitted out out with handy sets of pigeon-holes which would keep the little trifles in place and prevent laces from getting mixed up with ribbons ad belts and ties from becoming interfaced. Things keep fresh and smart so much longer when they are kept neatly folded among their own kind. The Halifax Daily Echo - date unknown
Maud uses her column to give advice to amateur photographers on how to acheive an image using trick photography:
If you want to make a "winter moonlight scene" here is how you go about it. Take an ordinary negative of some landscape. Don't have leafiness in it. Evergreen trees and an old farm house or so make the best picture for this. The Halifax Daily Echo, May 12, 1902I wonder if the people of Nova Scotia looked forward to reading the next installment of "Around the Table"?
Synchronicity
Last week (around the time that I received the Halifax packet) a full Harvest moon appeared in the night sky over North Carolina. Thereby, my camera and I headed down to the river in an attempt to capture the beauty of the moment. However, I know nothing about night photography and the flash of the camera got in the way. The result was not good. The flash just overtakes the image when it bounces off of the leafiness of the trees The moon recedes in importance. I wonder what Maud is saying about leafiness. She isn't very clear with her point.
Labels:
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Maud doesn't like the deepness..
Friday, July 10, 1931
Norval, Ont
...I have been re-reading Macaulay's Life by Trevelyan. I read it first that winter in Prince Albert. Found it delightful then and found it just as delightful still. But most of its charm is due to Macaulay's letters. One criticism the writer of the introduction makes is that Macaulay's letters show nothing profound in his nature. Very likely. Very likely--nay, almost certainly--had they been profound they would not have been delightful. The ocean depths are profound--but I prefer a sunlit meadow for my strolling. Anyhow, I should like to have got letter from Macaulay.
The Selected Journals of LM Montgomery, Rubio & Waterston, Vol IV, p 139
Labels:
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Maud's Memories of Home
Macneill Homestead Cavendish, PEI |
"...The mention of cheese wakens another memory. It is evening. Grandmother and Grandfather are adjusting the cheese hoop under the press. I am standing by watching them and drinking in the loveliness around me. June was walking over the fields. The sun had just set and I saw that loveliest of all created things--a young moon in an amber evening sky.
And the lambs were playing in the pasture field by the house.
Do lambs play like that now? I suppose they do, only I never have a chance to see them. But what gorgeous times those lambs did have at their evening games while their placid old mothers nibbled on around them. In a drove thy tore from one end of the field and back again, the noise of their small hoofs like mild thunder. They would run those races until dark fell--seemingly just for the joy of running. I never saw such happy creatures."
The Selected Journals of LM Montgomery, Rubio & Waterston, Vol. IV p 141
Labels:
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Monday, September 20, 2010
Wanting to go back...
A photo of Maud's mother at Park Corner |
Although I was so very glad to get "home" from my trip to Canada I am now experiencing the most intense desire to go back!! I especially would like to see again the sleepy little town of Bedeque. There is a sweet looking Bed & Breakfast there that seems to be calling my name.
It's strange that I did not feel bonded with Cavendish, and though I tried very hard, I did not even get a whiff of Maud there (except on the Cavendish Shore--but only slightly then.)
Food is a problem because I am vegetarian. One really has to dine in Charlottetown when one is a vegetarian and visiting the Island.
What is calling me back there????
Labels:
Lucy Maud,
Prince Edward Island
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Costume Era Correction - Faux Pas!!
One of my very trustworthy Island Canadian friends has corrected me in my assertion for the blog post on September 6th. It seems that I am about a 100 years off in my costume comparison. She states it as thus:
"your reenactors pix - the New Bern ones are in garb that was fashionable in the 1700s, the Fathers and Mothers of Confederation are in the top 1864 style!"
I stand corrected.
Here are some photos from my archives of the 1860's period in the Southern United States (specifically North Carolina). This period was the time of the Civil War aka: The War Between the States aka: The War of Northern Aggression
Notice the similarities in the white Peter Pan collars, the pins at the neck, the ric rac trimmed skirts, the gloves, the waists, the sleeves, etc, etc. The difference (again) being in the headware. I suppose because of the heat of the sun, we had to wear the brimmed hats (not that they didn't in Canada, we'll have to wait and see what my trustworthy Canadian friend has to say about it!)
New Bern, North Carolina - USA @ 1864 |
Charlottetown, PEI , Canada @ 1864 |
"your reenactors pix - the New Bern ones are in garb that was fashionable in the 1700s, the Fathers and Mothers of Confederation are in the top 1864 style!"
I stand corrected.
Here are some photos from my archives of the 1860's period in the Southern United States (specifically North Carolina). This period was the time of the Civil War aka: The War Between the States aka: The War of Northern Aggression
Notice the similarities in the white Peter Pan collars, the pins at the neck, the ric rac trimmed skirts, the gloves, the waists, the sleeves, etc, etc. The difference (again) being in the headware. I suppose because of the heat of the sun, we had to wear the brimmed hats (not that they didn't in Canada, we'll have to wait and see what my trustworthy Canadian friend has to say about it!)
Labels:
Era costumes Civil War
Friday, September 17, 2010
"In An Old Town Garden" a poem by Lucy Maud Montgomery
"In An Old Town Garden"
By an old wall with lichen grown,
It holds apart from jar and fret
A peace and beauty all its own.
The freshness of the springtime rains
And dews of morning linger here;
It holds the glow of summer noons
And ripest twilights of the year.
Above its bloom the evening stars
Look down at closing of the day,
And in its sweet and shady walks
Winds spent with roaming love to stray,
Upgathering to themselves the breath
Of wide-blown roses white and red,
The spice of musk and lavender
Along its winding alleys shed.
Outside are shadeless, troubled streets
And souls that quest for gold and gain,
Lips that have long forgot to smile
And hearts that burn and ache with pain.
But here is all the sweet of dreams,
The grace of prayer, the boon of rest,
The spirit of old songs and loves
Dwells in this garden blossom-blest.
Here would I linger for a space,
And walk herein with memory;
The world will pass me as it may
And hope will minister to me.
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Thursday, September 16, 2010
"September" - a poem by Lucy Maud Montgomery
Lo! a ripe sheaf of many golden days
Gleaned by the year in autumn's harvest ways,
With here and there, blood-tinted as an ember,
Some crimson poppy of a late delight
Atoning in its splendor for the flight
Of summer blooms and joys
This is September.
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Photos of Tryon Palace by Rosemary Osterhus |
Labels:
Poetry Lucy Maud Montgomery
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
"Mornng along Shore" by Lucy Maud Montgomery
Morning Along Shore
Hark, oh hark the elfin laughter
All the little waves along,
As if echoes speeding after
Mocked a merry merman's song!
All the gulls are out, delighting
In a wild, uncharted quest
See the first red sunshine smiting
Silver sheen of wing and breast!
Ho, the sunrise rainbow-hearted
Steals athwart the misty brine,
And the sky where clouds have parted
Is a bowl of amber wine!
Sweet, its cradle-lilt partaking,
Dreams that hover o'er the sea,
But the lyric of its waking
Is a sweeter thing to me!
Who would drowze in dull devotion
To his ease when dark is done,
And upon its breast the ocean
Like a jewel wears the sun?
"Up, forsake a lazy pillow!"
Calls the sea from cleft and cave,
Ho, for antic wind and billow
When the morn is on the wave!
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Photos by Rosemary Osterhus - New Bern, NC |
Labels:
Lucy Maud Montgomery,
Poetry
Monday, September 13, 2010
"The Gulls" a poem by Lucy Maud Montgomery
"The Gulls"
I
Soft is the sky in the mist-kirtled east,
Light is abroad on the sea,
All of the heaven with silver is fleeced,
Holding the sunrise in fee.
Lo! with a flash and uplifting of wings
Down where the long ripples break,
Cometh a bevy of glad-hearted things,
'Tis morn, for the gulls are awake.
II
Slumberous calm on the ocean and shore
Comes with the turn of the tide;
Never a strong-sweeping pinion may soar,
Where the tame fishing-boats ride!
Far and beyond in blue deserts of sea
Where the wild winds are at play,
There may the spirits of sea-birds be free
'Tis noon, for the gulls are away.
III
Over the rim of the sunset is blown
Sea-dusk of purple and gold,
Speed now the wanderers back to their own,
Wings the most tireless must fold.
Homeward together at twilight they flock,
Sated with joys of the deep
Drowsily huddled on headland and rock
'Tis night, for the gulls are asleep.
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Photos by R Osterhus, New Bern, NC |
Monday, September 6, 2010
Comparing the fashions of similar period: Charlottetown, PEI and New Bern, NC
New Bern today
Charlottetown, PEI in July
We were driving down the block today when my sister called out, "There are some reenactors." So, of course I put on the brakes and grabbed my camera to jump out of the car. The hard thing about reenactors is that you have to catch them when and where you can. They aren't too fond of posing, because they are suppose to be "in the mode". That is why I usually can only get the shots as they are walking away from me. Here, the lady in red kept my eyes riveted to her. It is amazing the effect that color has on me. It is my sense that Maud was affected by colors in the same way.
As to the purpose of the post--comparing the fashions between Charlottetown and New Bern (and I'm taking a wild guess that the comparions of the photos would be about the same time period)--I do note some subtle differences, especially in the ladie's head wear.
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