In a box
stored in the basement of our home, I have a record of my school history,
grades 1 through 12. It was a box my mother kept, and kept adding to, and
included everything from report cards and penmanship books to tests and
notebooks. Best of all, my mother put a date on everything.
Longfellow (1859) by Matthew Brady. |
And so,
from 1958, I find the “November Activity Unit,” about the size of a very thin
comic book. We had one of these for each month of the school year, and the
units contained topical information about the month, holidays, and similar
events, with every page containing illustrations to color. I suspect this was a
form of busy work, something to keep the children in my second-grade class
occupied while the teacher did other things. By second grade, I was familiar
with Thanksgiving dinner, but it was that activity unit that introduced me to
the Pilgrims.
A few
years later in sixth grade, we read The
Courtship of Miles Standish by Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow, and that reading supplemented what we were learning
in history. Longfellow took the names of his main characters in the poem –
Miles Standish, John Alden, and Priscilla Mullins – from the names of real
people who arrived in America on the Mayflower. The poem
includes events that are certainly historical – conflict with native Americans
and disease – but how much of the love story is factual is open to debate.
To
continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak
Poetry.
Painting: John Alden and Miles
Standish, as painted by N.C. Wyeth.
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