Beatrix and her pet rabbit, Peter. |
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Thursday, February 22, 2018
Beatrix Potter: The Rest of the Story
Thursday, February 15, 2018
By the way...
I've updated the "About" page. Just in case you're interested.
Also, I'll take this opportunity to remind you that I'd love any feedback and ideas you have for the Valiant Woman Project! Drop me a comment!
Wishing you all a grace-filled Lent!
Also, I'll take this opportunity to remind you that I'd love any feedback and ideas you have for the Valiant Woman Project! Drop me a comment!
Wishing you all a grace-filled Lent!
Beatrix Potter: A Life of Resourcefulness, Perseverance, and Love
I’m sure you’ll all familiar with Beatrix Potter’s classic children’s stories with their delightful illustrations. You may even own some of the Peter Rabbit Wedgwood dishes. If you’ve seen the 2006 movie Miss Potter, then you’re familiar with the role she played in preserving the countryside of the Lake District. But did you know that she was also an amateur mycologist (that’s mushroom and fungi scientist) and that she helped saved the Herdwick sheep from extinction? Beatrix Potter lived a life full of activity, using her imagination and creativity when necessary. She never let obstacles or difficulties discourage her, and instead she would channel her energies toward another goal. Throughout it all, her life was full of love—for the natural world, for her family, for her work, and finally for her husband.
Thursday, February 8, 2018
A Woman of Great Faith and Courage
Did you ever wonder why at a Traditional Mass the altar boys hold up the priest’s chasuble during the consecration at the elevation of the host and chalice? This practice would have originated out of necessity because the chasuble was formerly made of heavily embroidered and stiff material. Later the pattern and material used for the vestments changed, but the practice remained because it had begun to be associated with one of Christ’s miracles from the Gospels.
Thursday, February 1, 2018
Margaret Hale: Compassion in North and South
A long time ago we talked about Molly Gibson, the heroine of Wives and Daughters, one of my favorite books. It’s high time we
visit that other literary masterpiece by Mrs. Elizabeth Gaskell—North
and South. If you are
unfamiliar with this novel, I highly recommend it. (YouTube has multiple LibriVox recordings of the book as well as the amazing BBC adaptation with Richard Armitage, which I can't recommend highly enough!) North and South is the story of Margaret Hale, a young woman whose clergyman
father uproots the family from their idyllic country home in
southern England and takes
them north to Milton, a smoky, dirty, bustling manufacturing town.
One of the first people she meets there is Mr. Thornton, a factory
owner whose manners are much rougher than what Margaret has been
accustomed to while living in
London. In
Milton, Margaret’s
pride is transformed into humility as she faces
many trials and becomes
well-acquainted with loss.
But in this post we’re going to focus on Margaret’s
compassion which
inspires her to help and protect those she loves, and
which inspires Mr. Thornton to find his own humanity.
N.B.
I realize that this work may not be familiar to you all, so in
an effort not to spoil any of the story, some of the details will be purposefully vague.