December,
1936
The
living room was Ina’s favorite room. She lived many years without a real parlor
complete with fireplace, and for the rest of her life she meant to cherish the
comfort of this room.
Ina
understood that when temperatures dipped below freezing, the front door had to
be corked up and the pocket doors between the dining and living rooms closed,
thereby shutting the living room off from the rest of the house. She and Jack
would then confine their activities to the dining room and kitchen, which were
adequately warmed by the cook stove and the wood stove in the dining room. Such
a cold spell might happen once or twice a winter and last a week or two. She
knew that if Jack had his way, they would close off the living room most of the
winter, but she wouldn’t hear of it. She loved to read and write beside
the fireplace.
Ina
pulled the rocking chair over to the fireplace and commenced to read her
magazine. She was particularly interested in the feature article, “Christmas
Eve by my Fireside,” written by Katharine Fisher, director of Good Housekeeping
Institute.*
“To
me Christmas Eve is the high point in the festivities of this loveliest of all
holidays,” wrote Mrs. Fisher. “It holds more magic than even Christmas day, for
it is a time when all our preparations seem to work up to a blissful climax.
The fragrant spiciness of the fresh balsam and pine brings thoughts of frankincense
and myrrh. There is an air of expectancy, of something about to happen, as on
that first Christmas Eve so long ago.”
“Yes,
all right,” thought Ina to herself. “I know what she means -- all preparations finished
and the house in quiet readiness with a kind of expectation in the air.”
Reading on: “We always leave the Institute early that afternoon, gaily calling a Merry Christmas to those who are hurrying out with us. At home friends are dropping in to extend holiday greetings and to leave gay packages on the hall table. A glance at the mounting pile of unopened Christmas mail bridges the miles between old friends. The familiar handwritings on envelopes and packages seem like friendly handclasps across the years.”
*The
quoted article appears in Good Housekeeping, December 1936. I didn't find much about Katharine Fisher online, except that she authored a
number of books during a long affiliation with the Good Housekeeping Institute.
KW
3 comments:
My favorite part about camping is the fire (my least favorite part is the smoke--go figure). There is something mesmerizing and relaxing about watching the flames dance and slowly devour the log.
I like the picture from the magazine. I wish there was more time to just sit around the fire with loved ones and converse. I agree with Ina's Christmas philosophy. It is nice to show gratitude and love with gifts, but certainly more meaningful to have time together and to make memories.
I love the picture of Ina's fireplace. That she used precious film to take a picture of it speaks volumes.
I also love "Ina's" thoughts about Christmas Eve--"... all preparations finished and the house in quiet readiness with a kind of expectation in the air." That's always my goal, but often it's just a few moments of reflection late on Christmas Eve just before I finally fall into bed. Every year I think I'll be ready by December 23 and quietly enjoy the rest, but somehow it never happens. But there's always this year!!! :-)
I re-scanned the magazine pictures this morning and replaced them. I knew I could do better.
I wish I had more interior pictures from Ina's day, especially of the kitchen. No one thought that one day there would be computers allowing us to visit with each other through "blogs" and that we might wish for a wider variety of shots. And if Ina had known I would write about her, she might have tossed the letters!
We have the "quiet readiness" atmosphere to some extent, and we cherish it. We used to open gifts on Christmas Eve, but now we enjoy the tree with its unopened secrets and open on Christmas Day -- whatever date that is. We are flexible with our Christmas, and I think Chris and Dan are, too.
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