A Domestic Tragedy
By Robert Service
Clorinda met me on the way
As I came from the train,
Her face was anything but gay,
In fact, suggested pain.
“Oh hubby, hubby dear!” she cried,
“I’ve awful news to tell!”
“What is it darling?” I replied.
“Your mother, is she well?”
“Oh no! Oh no, it
is not that,
It’s something else,” she wailed,
My heart was beating pit-a-pat,
My ruddy visage paled.
Like lightning flash in heaven’s dome
The fear within me woke:
“Don’t say,” I cried, “our little home
Has all gone up in smoke!”
She shook her head.
Oh, swift I clasped
And held her to my breast;
“The children! Tell
me quick,” I gasped,
“Believe me, it is best.”
Then, then she spoke; mid sob I caught
These words of woe divine:
“It’s coo-coo-cook has gone and bought
A new hat just like mine!”
Been doing a lot of going out and around the last couple
of weeks. Went with eleven fellow church
members to Faribault
to see the Cathedral of Our Merciful Savior, begun in 1862 and dedicated in 1869.
It’s the first Episcopal Cathedral in the U.S. - I don't know what those people out east were doing all that time. Built by the first Bishop of Minnesota, Henry
Benjamin Whipple, he is buried there.
St. James in Chicago
claims to be the first, but St. James started out as a church and only later
was designated a cathedral. They say
they made the change before Merciful Savior was built, but there’s a stained
glass window in Merciful Savior that says right on the glass that it’s a gift
from St. James Church, Chicago. So
there!
Then this past Saturday I went to Apple Day (it’s only on
Saturday now, when it used to run through Sunday and was called Apple
Days). The weather was perfect, cool in
the morning, sunny all day. Lots and
lots of vendors, selling everything from crafts to caramel apples. And such great crafts! There was a booth selling pottery (I bought a
butter bell) and featuring beautiful vases in pale colors with thin black
squiggles all over them – made by strewing hair from horses’ manes and tails
over them while they are hot from the kiln.
And a man who made fish and wild animals from wire – odd how the mere
outline of an animal with a dip here and a curve there can describe a moose or
a buffalo or a northern pike, or even a little crappie or dragonfly so
eloquently. I nearly bought the buffalo,
but decided I couldn’t afford it, and left with regret – forgetting that I
could have afforded the crappie or dragonfly and used one or the other as a
Christmas tree ornament. Oh, and I began
the day by sitting for a couple of hours in the Excelsior Bay Bookstore
booth. Sold a lot books, but had a lot
more people tell me they already owned all of them. That was a great compliment!
Then yesterday evening I went to a new-formed book club to
talk about Crewel World. Interesting people, informed and intelligent,
asking good questions – I love doing that sort of thing.
Normally by this late in the stages of writing a book, I
have the next one moving to the fore, waving its hand for attention. I know who is going to die and who killed him
or her and pretty much why and what mistakes my killer is going to make that
will undo him – or her. And that’s not
happening this time. I think I have a
title: Knot Guilty. And I think it happens in late summer, maybe
at Apple Day. But I don’t know who
murders who.
3 comments:
Sounds as if you've been attending a lot of fun events, Monica.
Monica, just to let you know my latest crochet mystery is called Knot Guilty. The paperback comes out in November.
Ack! So that shoots my idea down. Not to worry, I have other titles, plus I was not looking forward to learning needle lace or tatting.
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