She
could only play one song on the piano: “Home, Sweet Home.” But she played it
with both hands and an Alberti bass.
As
a little girl, she liked to draw and write poetry.
She
played in a ukulele and harmonica band in grammar school.
She
knew all the words to “The Prisoner’s Song.”
She
kept a scrapbook on the Status of Women for her WSCS Methodist group long
before anyone ever talked about feminism.
Her
purse smelled like chewing gum because she kept treats for a child who grew
bored at church.
She
would have been valedictorian of her high school class except for me.
As
it was, she was voted the Flappingest Flapper.
She
ran away to marry Daddy when she was 17 years old on August 4, 1935. They were
married 50 years.
She
named me for her sister Elizabeth and for a Civilian Conservation Corps boy
named Michael who was allowed to walk her to church. She said she just liked
the name and didn’t care whether it was a girl’s name or a boy’s name.
Elizabeth had too many syllables, so it was shortened to Lysbeth. She called me
both names when I was in trouble.
When
I repeated a racial epithet I had heard at school, she said in her scariest
voice “I don’t ever want you to say that word again.” I still can’t say it.
The
strongest word I ever heard her use was “Criminy.”
She
was little, but she was brave and physically strong. She could lift boulders.
And she could be fierce, a quality I have admired all my life.
She
listened to Roosevelt’s third term inaugural address on the radio. She cried
when he died. She hardly ever cried.
She
never really got over my brother Lindle’s death.
She
only had one cookbook.
She
drew the line at cleaning fish.
She
didn’t care for off-color jokes. She couldn’t really tell a joke because she
always garbled the punch line.
She
read every Erle Stanley Gardner mystery ever written.
When
my sophisticated college boyfriend said he thought she had good taste, I was
astonished. I didn’t know she had any taste at all.
I
overheard her having a political discussion with a smart lawyer. “You can’t
beat City Hall,” she said.
She
had three older sisters with college degrees, but she had us instead. When I
asked her what she would have studied in college, she said “Why, History, of
course.”
On
my 76th birthday this June 8, she phoned me up and said “I just
wanted to tell you that I think we did a good job with you.”
(Frances Ensor Benedict, May 16, 1918-September 2, 2012)
4 comments:
Thank you for this illumination. Thank you, very much!
Oh Aunty Mikie, thank you for this. Love you very much!
What a beautiful woman! Hugs.
this is lovely. thank you.
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