Tuesday, November 5, 2024

PEOPLE OF PAXTON




I've long had a whole townful of folks circulating through my head---they're folks I've known, or would like to, or composites of two or three interesting or memorable characters of the past or present. Perhaps forty of them have been introduced in here, and on my PAXTON PEOPLE blog, and I hope to someday combine the whole town into a story or two. I get going describing folks---their talents, their houses, their attributes and afflictions, and their interactions with other folk, and I can do pretty well up to the point of GIVING THEM SOMETHING TO DO. A Plot. A Story that would be worth reading, interweaving lives and actions into some semblance of a book. 


 Someone will suddenly come to me, with a whole personality and whims and a life of their own, and it seems as if I've actually known them, and there's no trouble putting down whatever comes to mind, but then there they sit. And I have whole gaggles of Paxton folks circulating through my head---church folks and townfolk and folks scattered on their farms and little bits of land. They are from memories, wishes, and imagination, with no insinuation of which is which, since they feel like long-worn quilts from a fragrant old cedar-chest: scraps and pieces of whole cloth, aprons and dresses and shirts and a bolero or two. There might be a small swatch from the minuscule Barbie-skirt on Harliss’ plate, or a small snip from the MOTHER pillow sent from Japan by Carey Luke Bishop, while he was overseas. Perhaps a bit of lace from one of Mrs. Keen's dainty handkerchiefs she always had tucked into the sleeve of her silky blouse. The imaginary black-as-night silk cloak swirled in Miss Mavis’ wake makes an appearance, as well as a whole section of pattern composed of bits from prom dresses, bridesmaid’s dresses, piano recital dresses for generations of Paxton girls, all from the trusty needle of Mrs. Barbee.



 The tales behind the stitches in all those generations of Hope Chests in that small town could populate a library, and and I want so much to tell those stories.     All the pieces are separate, thus far, of different colors and patterns, velvet and gingham and denim and suede---good broadcloth and flimsy voile, taffeta and bridal satin folded with khaki, ancient woolen---blue and gray, sailcloth, stars and stripes, but just as I've never put needle to cloth with any useful or beautiful result, it's an uphill climb to get them all cut and sewn into a quilt pattern and a story and a town. 

I'm workin' on it.

3 comments:

  1. It would be a Bestseller, especially in the South!!! One thing I know for sure----YOU WERE BORN TO WRITE!!! Debbie at debbisfrontporch, not anonymous!! Lol!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you, my dear Friend!! One of my poems will be appearing in the next issue of Bayou Blues and Red Clay---I've read all the issue, and there's some mighty powerful, raw, heart-torn Southern verse in there. I feel as if I've submitted a Nursery Rhyme amongst a great Magna Opera. A little note in your PORCH mailbox is waiting.

    ReplyDelete
  3. My dear R,

    This is such a beautiful piece of writing and I thoroughly enjoyed reading it. I hope you are doing well. The winter has arrived here in Scotland and it's been freezing cold for a few days. I've been very busy these days and hence, apologies for this belated comment to say how much I enjoyed your reminiscences...just as much as I love reading soothing words by Gladys Taber. I know you love GT and I grow fonder of her writings and her observations of life and natural surroundings.

    I love your analogy of stitching a patchwork quilt and making magic with words in the way you tell these stories. Both can give us a quality of a spell. In fact, storytelling can often happen at the same time as making a quilt. I have been spellbound by your gentle way of telling stories and the discovery of your magnanimity in the presence of your beautiful words that you string together stitch by stich.

    Wishing you a peaceful week.

    Best wishes, ASD

    ReplyDelete