One of My Heroes

I fell in like with George Grant in 1995.

My husband knows.  He likes him too. 

1995 is the year we began to take World magazine.  Dr. Grant wrote book reviews in a column called Grant’s Tomes.  His choice of words, his turns of phrase, his cadences – in short, his style – charmed and captivated me.  His themes of booklove, gardens, music, food, family and friends bounced around my soul making  happy echoes and haunting overtones.  He loved Scotland.  [really, I could end this essay right there.]

Dr. Grant took me by the hand, so to speak, into a massive reading room.  As we moseyed by bookcases he began loading my arms with recommended books and filling my head with pithy quotes.  He taught me the lineup of his favorite big hitters: Chesterton, Chalmers, Buchan, Belloc, Kuyper, MacDonald, Lytle, Van Til, Roosevelt. He reviewed classics, ubiquitous and obscure.  Newly published books were spotlighted, but only the good ones.  He defended his practice of writing positive reviews. “I make no pretense of being a journalist or a professional critic of belles lettres,”  he wrote. “I am a reader who happens to enjoy sharing my favorite discoveries with others.” I had imbibed the waters of popular Christian pulp fiction and was thirsty for a heartier ale.  Grant, more than any other living soul (with my beloved Latin teacher coming in a close second), influenced the choices, direction and purpose of my omnivorous reading.  

I ripped those columns from their binding, snipped neatly around the borders, slipped them into page protectors and gripped them together in a binder labeled Book Reviews. 

This overstuffed binder full of clippings (not just Dr. Grant’s),

crammed with book lists, loaded with scrawled notes on little bits of paper, interspersed with directions to used bookstores,

tightened by essays on the bookish life, and containing a handwritten list written for me in answer to the question, ‘where should I start reading?’  by the late Dr. Mary Jane Loso

(the local university’s English Chair extraordinaire) is my personal Fort Knox.  If I were my own heir, this is the item I’d covet, the one thing I would abandon all pleasant “no, you go first” murmurs for.  Each time I pick it up I comprehend more.  Grant reviewed Wendell Berry in 1996, but I didn’t really meet Wendell Berry until 2006. 

We went to several conferences where George Grant was a speaker.  My husband and I joined the asymmetrical semi-circle of people waiting for a word with the tall, bow-tied, bespectacled man close to our own age.  When it was my turn, I shook his hand and simply said, “Thank you. You’ve changed my life.”    

Some college friends of ours have recently moved from California to Franklin, Tennessee.  Our theological paths seemed parallel thirty years ago, but time has widened the differences. We gently recommended  Parish  Presbyterian where George Grant is pastoring, but haven’t heard back.  Ain’t no question about it: if we lived in Franklin, that would be our church.

I picked up Grant’s book Going Somewhere this week.  It is so jam-packed full of goodness, that my review will take several posts, starting tomorrow. Stay tuned.

Wendell Berry

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wendellberry wendellberry      i love his writing       wendellberry wendellberry wendellberry wendellberry
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I read two short stories aloud to my husband and son this weekend: The Hurt Man and Don’t Send a Boy to Do a Man’s Work.   After hearing The Hurt Man my husband exclaimed, “That’s some of the best writing I’ve ever heard.” I want to get up in the middle of the night and read more.  I want to grab people, stop them in their tracks and make them listen.  I want to buy 50 copies and pass them out left and right.   I am smitten.

Here are a few phrases which have captured me:

At the age of five Mat was beginning to prepare himself to help in educating his grandson, though he did not know it.

The shape of his hand in printed on the flesh of my thigh as vividly as a birthmark.  This man who was my grandfather is present in me, as I felt always his father to be present in him.

At those times she lived in his love as in a spacious house.

A Frame of Silence

Such a treat last night – a concert held in a gorgeous church by the excellent Williamette University Chamber Choir. 

My favorite piece was Felix Mendelssohn’s Richte Mich Gott (Psalm 43). You didn’t need to know German to tell, by the music, when the choir came to these words. 
 

Why are you downcast, O my soul?
Why so disturbed within me?
Put your hope in God,
for I will yet praise him,
my Savior and my God.

Yesterday brought two heavy items for prayer.  Being bathed in beautiful music brought rest, relief and realignment. When the choir finished a piece there was a moment of silence which appropriately captured and contained the wonder.  A young man close by me audibly exhaled after the first piece, as if he had been holding his breath during the whole piece.  The concert ended with the choir’s signature piece Nunc Dimittis the glorious Song of Simeon

Professor Robert Greenberg, of The Teaching Company, on silence after a performance (transcribed from his series Great Masters:Haydn – His Life and Music):

One must always wait for an appropriate amount of silence.  Silence is the frame that surrounds any given piece of music.  We do not clap before the piece begins because we need to frame the beginning with absolute nothingness; and I trust that nothingness also includes no gagging, hacking, coughing or other tubercular signs of respiratory illness.

Likewise the end of the piece should be followed by an equally appropriate pause, that the music may exist within its own space.


Anything that disturbs that space disturbs our perception of the new world we’ve been transported to and has a terribly, terribly dislocating effect in the heart, ear, spirit and mind of the listener.

So let us not be that person who must applaud first.


Magister Dilectus (Beloved Teacher)

Janie asked me to write a post about this Latin teacher whom I refer to so often. I solicited essays from two friends who also studied Latin.  Bonnie at Btolly and Brenda at Tanabu Girl are writing today about our beloved Mr. F. (We always called him Mister even though he was a Ph.D.) Together we have a trifecta tribute!

When we decided to learn Latin, we were desperate for help.  After a year of groping on our own towards one handhold of understanding I started praying and making phone calls.  I randomly asked people over 50 if they knew Latin.  “Well, not really; I took it in high school but don’t remember a thing,”  was the general response.  One phone call followed another as we tracked the scent of a Latin teacher. 

Eventually I was led to a professor at our local university and she was intrigued with the idea, but didn’t imagine where she would find time.  The next words out of her mouth changed our lives.  “You need to call Dr. F.  He is a retired classics professor who recently moved here with his wife.”  As luck would have it (heh heh) my husband had been contracted to do some work in their home.  My husband told me to wait in calling Dr. F. until he’d done a little background check of his own.  He came home one day and exclaimed, “Do you know how many languages this guy knows?  And he knows Biblical Greek!”  But more than anything, he was impressed with Mr. F’s attitude.  He was not pompous, arrogant, or weird – quite the opposite.

There are moments in your life that are indelibly imprinted on your brain.  I remember odd details about making the “cold call” to Dr. F.  For privacy and peace I was in our garage shivering and staring out the window of the garage door and contemplating the spider webs above the header.  After he answered the phone I explained who I was and that I represented a group of about 25, mostly kids and some parents, who would like to learn Latin; would he be willing to teach us?  His first response was, “Do you know what you are getting yourself into?  It’s not quite the same as learning Spanish.”  To which I rejoined that we would be willing to give it a try if he would be willing to take us on.

So began six years of the best teaching I have ever received.  We met one night a week for two hours so our progress was necessarily slow.  I think we went back to the beginning of Wheelock’s four or five times to shore up our faulty foundation.  Here was a man who had taught the best and brightest grad students, a shining star in the world of classics, drilling young teens on the rudiments of Latin patiently, carefully, without a hint of condescension.   I showed him my nephew’s Latin book; as he looked at the author’s name on the title page he exclaimed, “Oh my, yes! I had this fellow for a student.”

So we learned Latin.  We learned the idiom (at times he corrected the Wheelock answer to make it more idiomatically correct); we learned grammar; we declined nouns and conjugated verbs.  He told us that we were taught femina because it’s a first declension noun; however, mulier is the more common word in Latin for woman. Beyond that we learned the stories behind the sentences which we translated.  Ah, the stories! Mr. F has an encyclopedic memory and could connect words and sentences to stories from classical antiquity, medieval lore, literary episodes and current events. My boys soaked up the story of the battle of Marathon as told by the beloved Mr. F.  Wheelock’s Latin was just a springboard for teaching.  His examples to illustrate a concept came from the wide world of his reading and study.  I’ll never, no never, forget when he showed us the ethical dative and quoted Jane Austen using it. Who knew you could find the ethical dative in Jane Austen?

The Latin class became a culture class: we listened to Carmina Burana and other pieces of classical music.  He would bring a painting out and give us a lesson in art appreciation as he explained elements of the art.  He read us poems, excerpts from literature, a column from the Wall Street Journal.  We read through some Latin psalms, early church hymns, Latin poems.  A Homerian scholar, he quoted us Dido’s story in the Greek and explained it to us.  He showed us humor in unexpected places. Mr. F. was several times a guest lecturer in my co-op literature classes. 

The F’s love to name inanimate objects.  Their car was Abishag: a comfort in their old age.  They lived on a lovely piece of land and enjoyed cultivating and husbanding the property.  Mentally they divided it into the twelve tribes of Israel; Mr. F would tell his wife, “I’ll be working on Asher this morning.”  I can’t remember half of the great names they had but they were clever and fun.  Soon he will retire a second time and they will move back east.  The house they have purchased is grander than any they have previously lived in.  Their name for it? Pemberly!

At some point the class shifted from Mr. F’s house to our house.  Magister Dilectus and his wife joined us for dinner before class began.  Although we came from different perspectives theologically and perhaps philosophically, we enjoyed sweet times of communion around our table.  We now regard each other as life-long friends.  When I wish to give myself a special treat, a phone call visit with these dear friends is the thing.   

One of our first students went on to a well-respected liberal arts college (and is now a medical doctor).  When one of his professors asked Eric how he came to know Latin as a home schooler he mentioned Mr. F’s name.  His professor’s eyes bugged out and he said, “How did you get time with him?”  Eric replied that Mr. F. had retired and lived in his home town.  Thus began guest lectures at this college and eventually an invitation to return to teaching.  And our beloved Latin teacher and his equally beloved wife (a scholar in her own right) moved away to a new stage in their lives. 

By the end of our class we were down to three students; we had completed 36 of the 40 chapters of Wheelock’s.  But we learned a wealth of information, and had been infected with a desire to learn, to ask questions, to seek wisdom, to love truth, beauty and goodness. 

I may or may not pursue further formal studies when my stint as MagistraMater (teacher/mom) is completed. This one thing I know with knowledge deep in my bones: my Latin class with Mr. F. will be my Golden Age of learning.  Multiple times daily I look at a word and see the Latin behind it.  I feel like I’ve been given a secret code or a special set of glasses that makes the bright colors pop out.   My world has been expanded far beyond my expectations. 

How does one express her gratitude for such a gift?

                                                                                        

       

        Beloved Teacher,

        Nothing is better than a life of greatest diligence.                                                                       

Write. Think. Learn.

My wonderful sister-in-law alerted me to a Q and A from November 3, 2006 Aspen Institute with David McCullough here.  When I heard these words, I stopped what I was doing and transcribed his spoken words on writing and thinking:

“The old expression of working your thoughts out on paper […]  We’ve all had the experience of sitting down to write a term paper, or an essay, or a report; and in the process of writing we come up with an idea we didn’t know we had. 

And, the mere act of writing focuses the brain in a way nothing else does.  That’s why all courses in college and high school ought to require writing, not just English courses.  Young people ought to be required to write all the time and be judged, be graded, at how well they are expressing themselves.

So when our leaders are not working their thoughts out on paper — that’s a disadvantage for them.  And their words ar so often being provided by other people.  And the words being provided by other people aren’t just the words–it’s the ideas being provided by other people.

It’s thinking! That’s what writing is! That’s why it’s so hard.  It’s thinking.

I don’t know, you have this all the time, people say to me, ‘How much of your time is spent writing and how much of your time is spent doing research?’  Perfectly good question.

Nobody ever says, ‘How much time do you spend thinking?’  And the thinking is often the most important part of it.”

Adapting McCullough’s thoughts and borrowing from Mental Multi-vitamin

Write.  Think.  Learn.