I snapped that picture this morning just as we were leaving. We'd packed and honestly, Glen had loaded everything into the truck and I'd tidied up as much as I could without actually, you know- cleaning.
I love that little kitchen so much with its view of the pool and the river too, it's pink vintage stove, its terrazzo floors, the so very cool Melamine dishes with their crazy pinks and greens, their space-age shapes.
"Good-bye," I said, and before I got in the truck I patted and kissed one of the lions on the head and promised to be back soon.
His only reaction was to stand as still as a statue and spit water out of his mouth. But that is his job.
On our way down the sand road from Glenn and Scott's house, I spied Brad whom we had not seen (but heard) since that first night. Glen stopped the truck and we watched as he spread his fantastic feathers and did a 180, displaying them to us and I am convinced he was saying good-bye.
And then we drove home and as always, by the time we were about two hours from Lloyd I thought I would lose my mind if I had to sit in that seat for ten more minutes but there's so little mind left to lose that I survived, relatively intact. I read "The Yearling" out loud for about six hours and that is the truth. I have no idea how many times I've read this book since the first time I read it when I was probably 12. Maybe 11. I know I've already read it once out loud on other trips but Glen loves it too. There is fishing and hunting in it. Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings worked as hard as a man, drank as hard as a man, and hunted and fished with the men. Her descriptions of Florida back about the time this house was built are unparalleled in my opinion. Of course Marjorie wasn't alive at that time but she knew Florida and the scrub and river and vegetation and animals about as well as anyone, I think. And her love for it was profound.
The older I get, the more I recognize and appreciate her knowledge, her love for the state she moved to as an adult and adopted as her very own. And I have to give her credit for her characters who are unforgettable, human, and more real than some people I've met. Her dialogue is fantastic, which makes the book such a joy to read out loud.
And here's our Lloyd garden, so very different than from where we just left.
We did a quick tour of the garden before we unloaded the truck. Everything seems to be fine. We've had enough rain here to keep things going. I'll get more involved in it tomorrow.
I've unpacked nothing but the kitchen stuff which was a lot. We're both exhausted. I have started supper which so far is a pot of last year's canned green beans with some baby potatoes in it.
And that's the report.
Boud- your package came! I am charmed and so delighted. Thank you!
Maurice has been extremely stand-offish but just a second ago she jumped up here on my table and asked for a head rub which I gave her. When I had the audacity to try and scratch her a little bit down by her tail, she got into attack position and I jerked my hand back.
My reflexes are still sharp!
I will say that sleeping in our own bed tonight will be lovely.
And I will be adjusting back to North Florida which is so very, very different from from the middle east coast of Florida.
But I know that the sun is still setting over the Sebastian River and we can go back and walk out on the dock to watch it, hoping to see dolphins, and mullet jumping, maybe tarpon, fishing boats coming in and heading for home, osprey, pelicans, knowing that manatee may be there too.
What a lucky woman I am to be able to have these different worlds to live in.
I would say back to real life but that other life with the lions, the dock, the hibiscus, the dolphins, are every bit as real as this one.
And I will always know that.
Love...Ms. Moon



I see zinnias! Welcome home.
ReplyDeleteYep! Those are the ones reseeded from last year.
DeleteHow weird that you were reading " The Yearling" . I was reading it only 10 minutes ago before I got out of bed! It is our book club book for this month. I am finding the dialogue hard to read , but can just about understand it! I have got to the part where Jody has brought the fawn home and made it a bed in the shed.I am enjoying it more as I get into it......I thought that there was too much " description" to start with. Do you read the dialogue as it is written? Do you find it easy if you do? I think that is one point that our group will be discussing. Is it OK to read out to the group what you said here about it? ( I have photographed that paragraph!)
ReplyDeleteThat's so crazy, Francis. We had just gotten to a point a little bit past where Jody had brought the fawn home and made it a bed in the shed.
DeleteRawlings does incorporate a lot of description but I think she does it beautifully. Some of the scenes simply come alive for me, whether ones set in nature (the dance of the whooping cranes!) or ones centered on humans. Rawlings used a lot of people she knew to base characters on and perhaps that's why her characters are so vivid and real. At least to me.
Yes. I do read in the dialogue and I may be getting it all wrong but it comes naturally to me, probably because I grew up in the south and have heard rural people talking all my life. There are so many different versions of "English" here in the south and not just as to accents. I don't think Rawlings is trying to portray these people as ignorant or less than intelligent with the way they talk but as representative of how people who were not exposed to education in that part of Florida spoke. Intelligence and wisdom have nothing to do with that.
Of course you can quote me on anything I have said about the book. You didn't even have to ask but thank you for doing so.
Thanks for your long reply...I shall read that to my friends too! Before I arose this morning I got to the part where the fawn gets it's name.( Don't want to give any spoilers for anyone who might decide to read it ) Gave me a few tears!
DeleteIt's a fantastic book, Frances, and I am so glad to hear that your book club is reading it. I often worry that no one reads "The Yearling" anymore. When I was young Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings was still a phenomenon in Florida (though long dead), and I'm not sure that's still true to the same degree. We had "The Yearling" in the school library where I worked and it was rarely checked out. I think it seems like quite a big book to a lot of kids today, with their reduced attention spans.
DeleteNot a bad place to come home to. You’ve got some nice realities.
ReplyDeleteYou are so right.
DeleteReading books aloud rather than reading them in your head. Somehow it gives the words a different resonance. You obey the punctuation and enjoy the sounds, the rhythms and the collisions more than you would in silence. As an English teacher, I was reading aloud at work just about every day for thirty seven years. It's nice to think of you reading "The Yearling" aloud as your chauffeur transported you home.
ReplyDeleteI think that those of us who have read prodigiously all our lives tend to unconsciously skip parts of books. Perhaps ones that portray descriptions of nature, especially, and Rawling's descriptions of nature are such that skipping those is sort of missing the point. The book is as much about Florida as it is the story of a little boy and his fawn.
DeleteAnd so much more than that is noticed and caught when you read out loud.
I know I read "The Yearling" as a kid and enjoyed it. I should re-read it again now, in my advancing years.
ReplyDeleteI would be very curious as to what you thought about it now.
DeleteI'm glad the package arrived. My po man had to do quite a search because the zipcode isn't exactly what you put! He corrected it for me and I see it arrived. Good! And welcome home.
ReplyDeleteYes, I gave you the zip code for the PO box which is different than the one for the mail delivery box in front of the house. I'm sorry and kudos to you and your post guy for figuring it out.
DeleteGlad you got home safely!
ReplyDeleteSafe as can be.
DeleteGood idea to have a book on the road. And an excellent choice. Enjoy settling back into your home routine.
ReplyDeleteAs I said, we've done this one before but it is so worth repeating. The book I read on our way to Tennessee and back and finished up on this trip was Alexander Fuller's "Don't Let's Go To the Dogs Tonight" which is an entirely different type of book but also excellent. And come to think of it, Fuller loves Africa as much as Rawlings loved Florida.
DeleteYour garden is looking great with lots of new growth.
ReplyDeleteI will say, I am surprised at the vast regional differences in FL.
From Bocca, Del Ray Beach, Captiva, Island (friends/transplants live here), Lloyd to Roseland. Each seems very distinct.
Your photos and description of Roseland make is very appealing.
I just looked it up and Florida has four distinct growing zones as to plant hardiness. And those four are divided up into about eight sub zones! It's a long, long state.
DeleteAs to Roseland, I am, of course, taking pictures of the most beautiful spots as I see them.
I didn't realize Roseland was so far but I guess if it was closer you'd be spending more time there. Such a cute little bungalow. Is that beadboard the cabinets are fronted with? I love beadboard, used it extensively in this house.
ReplyDeleteAccording to the all-knowing google, it's 344 miles. Which yes, I consider to be a long damn drive.
DeleteI think the bead board on the cabinets is some sort of replica situation. I love bead board too.
Hi, Lady! We just returned from a week-long rail trip through western Canada. So beautiful. Lake Shuswap was my favorite. And it is WONDERFUL to be home and eat my own food and sleep in my own bed!
ReplyDeleteI've heard that Western Canada is simply beautiful and I believe it.
DeleteWe've been to Roseland so many times that it feels like another home to me. And I do cook almost every night so we're still eating my food!
What a fine love letter to Florida and Marjorie! Like Dorothy said though, “ there’s no place like home”.
ReplyDeleteXoxo
Barbara
I feel like I have several homes and Roseland is one of them. I am lucky to be able to go back. You CAN go home again.
DeleteI love that you move so smoothly from one reality to another. You sound like a happy woman.
ReplyDeleteI tell you something, Debby- I am a pretty happy woman these days for the most part. This is a very different feeling for me.
DeleteTwo things from my childhood, melamine plates and The Yearling. My mother's set of dishes was horrendous, and they had all been scratched to death long before I was old enough to eat off of them. Not only that, they all had burn marks on them from where my dad left lit cigarettes burn out on them. We all hated them. On the other hand, I have fond memories of reading The Yearling in my 5th grade reading class. I wonder why I never read it to my children.
ReplyDeleteOh yes. I remember Melamine plates in that exact condition. The ones in the kitchen in Roseland are cool though. They aren't scratched and have really "modern" shapes.
DeleteI never read The Yearling to my kids either but I know at least Hank read it when he was young and I think May did too. I know I encouraged them to do that.
So glad to hear you're back home. I can just imagine that kitchen in Roseland with the Melamine plates. I had a friend who used to collect space-age Melamine and Melmac dishes. They're probably worth something now.
ReplyDeleteI responded above to Frances with my feelings about "The Yearling." I remember you mentioning "South Moon Under" in previous posts as well -- the written accents in that one were quite challenging, as I recall: "Pie-tee."
I just looked up Melmac which is "molded from Melamine resin by the American Cyanamid company." Whoa! And Melamine is combined with formaldehyde to make the resin. And yet, supposedly they are both safe to eat on. Their value doesn't seem to be a whole lot, even now, although the vintage ones are of course more sought after.
ReplyDeleteI agree with what you said to Francis. I am really pushing Owen to read The Yearling. I gave him a copy years ago but kids just don't read books like that very much any more. I believe you're right about their attention spans which is sad as hell. August is my only grandchild who truly reads for pleasure.
Maybe Glen could try making fishing poles from bamboo!
ReplyDelete