Welcome to the Bonny Glen

ASL Sign Lookup

Our Family Rule of Six

  • Six Things to Include in Your Child's Day:

    • meaningful work
    • imaginative play
    • good books
    • beauty (art, music, nature)
    • ideas to ponder and discuss
    • prayer

    A Lilting House post explaining the Rule of Six:

    Whence It Came






My Bonny Clan

  • Jane, 13 yrs old
    Rose, 10 yrs
    Beanie, 7 yrs
    Wonderboy, 4 yrs
    Rilla, 2 yrs
    baby eagerly expected in January

    and Scott, the love of my life

Books by Melissa Wiley

Looking for the Lilting House?

More Than You Ever Wanted to Know About Us

  • Twitter Is a Kind of Daybook

    • Oh the Cute
      www.flickr.com

    Poetry Corner

    • FERN HILL

      by Dylan Thomas


      Now as I was young and easy under the apple boughs

      About the lilting house and happy as the grass was green,

      The night above the dingle starry,

      Time let me hail and climb

      Golden in the heydays of his eyes,

      And honoured among wagons I was prince of the apple towns

      And once below a time I lordly had the trees and leaves

      Trail with daisies and barley

      Down the rivers of the windfall light.



      And as I was green and carefree, famous among the barns

      About the happy yard and singing as the farm was home,

      In the sun that is young once only,

      Time let me play and be

      Golden in the mercy of his means,

      And green and golden I was huntsman and herdsman, the calves

      Sang to my horn, the foxes on the hills barked clear and cold,

      And the sabbath rang slowly

      In the pebbles of the holy streams.



      (read the rest)










      THE LAKE ISLE OF INNISFREE
      by William Butler Yeats

      I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
      And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made;
      Nine bean rows will I have there, a hive for the honey bee,
      And live alone in the bee-loud glade.

      And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow,
      Dropping from the veils of the morning to where the cricket sings;
      There midnight's all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow,
      And evening full of the linnet's wings.

      I will arise and go now, for always night and day
      I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;
      While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements gray,
      I hear it in the deep heart's core.



    Rings & Things

    « Fair-Weather Mom | Main | Perspective »

    March 28, 2005

    The Rabbit-Trailer's Soundtrack

    B000000pg301_scmzzzzzzz_Yesterday my kids pulled out a CD we used to listen to all the time: the soundtrack to Snoopy: The Musical. This was a play I loved as a teenager, when it was performed by some friends at a different high school. I had a crackly tape recording of a dress rehearsal which my sisters and I listened to ad nauseum. We had, after all, outgrown the soundtrack to Annie by then, and I had yet to discover the melodramatic satisfaction that is Les Miz.

    So when Jane was five or six and I, for no particular reason, found myself humming one of the dear old Snoopy songs, I hunted around online and found a recording. Ah, the bliss of Google! My tiny girls loved the album, as I knew they would. A singing dog! A boy named Linus! A squeaky-voiced Sally belting out tongue-twisters!

    Later, as the girls grew, they connected to Snoopy on different terms. One of our favorite songs on the album, "Clouds," is like a theme song for homeschoolers. Charlie Brown and the gang are lying around looking at the sky, and someone asks Charlie Brown what he sees in the clouds.

    "I see a—" he begins, but Sally cuts him off to sing that she sees: "A mermaid riding on a unicorn." Peppermint Patty sees "an angel blowing on a big long horn." Linus, ever my favorite, is a visionary. "I see Goliath, half a mile tall, waving at me....what do you see?"

    Poor Charlie Brown. How can he get an answer in edgewise? Lucy sees a team of fifty milk-white horses; Patty sees a dinosaur; Linus sees Prometheus, waving; Snoopy, grandiose as always, sees the Civil War. The entire Civil War.

    You could spend a year rabbit-trailing your way through this song. The Peanuts gang know their history, I'll give 'em that. (Although they seem to hit a bit of a roadblock when it comes to a certain American poet/storyteller, as evinced by their poor classroom performance in the hilarous song "Edgar Allen Poe," elsewhere on the album.) When these kids gaze at the clouds, they see Caesar crossing the Rubicon, the Fall of Rome, and even all twelve apostles, waving at Linus.

    Linus: "The Pyramid of Khufu!"

    Sally: "You too?"

    All but Charlie Brown: "Seven Wonders of the World..."

    For our family, this is a song of reciprocal delights. Some of these cloud-tableaux are historical events the girls already knew about, and the idea of Snoopy beholding an entire war sculpted in cumulus is irresistibly funny. Some events are things my kids first encountered in the song. When, years later, we read about the Rubicon in A Child's History of the World, there were gasps of delighted recognition from everyone including the then-two-year-old. Click, another connection is made.

    So I was happy to hear the Peanuts gang belting away once more yesterday afternoon. It has been a couple of years since last they regaled us with their splendid visions. The girls have encountered more of the world, more of the past, and so they have more to connect with in the lyrics of Charlie Brown's imaginative friends.

    As for Charles, alas. The gang, having at long last exhausted the gamut of grand happenings to see in the heavens, demand of Charlie, "Well, what do you see?"

    Says Charlie, glumly (and you probably remember the punchline from the Sunday funnies when you were a kid): "I was going to say a horsie and a ducky, but I changed my mind."

    (Cue hysterical laughter from little girls. Every. Single. Time.)

    TrackBack

    TrackBack URL for this entry:
    http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451de3969e200d835449a8769e2

    Listed below are links to weblogs that reference The Rabbit-Trailer's Soundtrack:

    Comments

    Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

    Verify your Comment

    Previewing your Comment

    This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

    Working...
    Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
    Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

    The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

    As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

    Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

    Working...

    Post a comment

    About This Site

    • This blog has moved to Wordpress!


      This is the former site of Here in the Bonny Glen. All old posts and comments have been moved to Wordpress. Please join us there!

      To update your feed, click here. Search this blog:




    Recently Read

    Categories

    Meta



    • Butterfly image above from:

      Listed on BlogShares
      MetaxuCafe