finding miss rumphius
by bam
“You must do something to make the world more beautiful.”
so instructs miss rumphius, the protagonist of the children’s book that vies for most-blessed on my shelf. close as a children’s book comes to gospel, far as i’m concerned.
miss rumphius, the great aunt of barbara cooney, the great children’s book writer and illustrator, is little and old when we meet her on the very first page of the very fine book. she lives in a little house overlooking the sea, on an island in maine. but she hadn’t always been old, we are told. she had been young, and she dreamed, and she longed to travel the world. when she was young, she spent her days by her grandpapa’s side in his wood-carving shop, where he chiseled away at great chunks of trees, making them into curly-cues and cherubs and figureheads for the prows of great sailing ships, ships that would criss-cross the seas. and, sometimes, when her grandpapa got too busy to finish his paintings of sailing ships and faraway places, he would let little alice (for that was her name before she was called miss rumphius) pick up his paint brush and “put in the skies” of his paintings. and in the evenings, when she sat on her grandpapa’s lap, curled up for the great and nearly lost art of unspooling stories, she told him she too wanted to sail the world like those ships, and, someday, live beside the sea. her grandpapa said that was all well and good, but there was a third thing she must do: “you must do something to make the world more beautiful.”
i’ll let you read for yourself just what miss rumphius stumbles upon. but i’ll give you a clue: it’s tall and it’s blue (or purple or lilac or pink, the color of sunsets) and it blows in the wind. and it carpets the hillsides. indeed, and no doubt, miss rumphius did just what she was told, she found a way to make the world more beautiful.
and she passed along her instruction to anyone who would listen, and anyone who happens to turn the pages of miss rumphius, the book: “you must do something to make the world more beautiful.”
it’s an instruction that’s ancient and timeless, and new every day.
miss rumphius sprung to mind this week — again and again and again — because i seem to keep stumbling upon her disciples here and there and everywhere. first, my own beloved uncle died, an uncle who, like miss rumphius, circumnavigated the globe, searching always for the beautiful and the rare and the breathtaking. he stitched his life with beauty — and stories — that left us oohing and ahhing, his flock of nieces and nephews. he instructed in short sweet pronouncements: “good things last,” or “when the cookies are passed, take one.” he instructed, most lastingly, in the way he lived: gently, devotedly, with rarest refinement.
miss rumphius sprung to mind again when my summer porch was filled one very fine morning with pewter-haired souls — a poet, a painter, a sculptor, a potter, a writer or two — and we all read words from the page, and it was beautiful, all of it. the poet, in fact, wrote later to say that the “gathering remains fixed in memory like a latter-morning Breughel.” (can you hear me sighing so deeply?)
and miss rumphius sprung to mind when a treasured soul i am blessed to know told me how she has a particular habit of filling her satchel with books, and scattering them to whomever she meets in the criss-crossing trails of her day. she calls them her rose petals, and she strews with abandon: to her seat mates on city buses; to the someones who happen to ride in her very same elevator; to whomever sits by her side in the children’s hospital cafeteria, where she works as a nurse. i told her she’s my miss rumphius, sprung from the pages. she didn’t know who i meant. so i wrote this just now so she — and you — might discover, and might, too, be enchanted.
and you, too, might set out to follow miss rumphius’ most lasting prescription: “do something to make the world more beautiful.”
what will be your beautiful?
Lovely writing–Miss Rumphius is on my shelf, too, as one of my favorite children’s books with wise words for all ages. Thank you for reminding me!
she’s heavenly. i do believe my deepest imagination lives in my children’s books shelf……
You always make Friday morning a delight. I will have to search for Miss
Rumphius. For me, nothing makes me happier than making a photograph.
i’ve just been poring over your photographs. they, too, take my breath away. they are otherworldly and deeply worldly at once. i keep trying to follow, but i must be doing something wrong…….you ARE a miss rumphius…..
You. You are my beautiful. Weekly and daily and in my head and in my heart. You.
Andrea Lavin Solow
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oh my goodness, on the eve of the wedding of your beautiful boy, and here you are! pure joy. sending love. and thank you and thank you…..a hundred thousand joys i scatter your way…..
My angel momma was my Miss Rumphius…
I’m captivated by your friend who collects books to share. What a lovely woman she must be, and what a beautiful gesture! She’s a walking, talking Little Free Library!!
I, too, treasure my children’s books so…. xxxooo
ah, sweet heart, what a blessing that your own mama was your miss rumphius. and, thus in turn you are a rumphius among us, scattering your lupine seeds of love and tender beauty.
“walking, talking Little Free Library!!”
xoxox
I adore Miss Rumphius! How special to read such wonderful commentary on a most loved book.
my heart just melted!!! of COURSE you love miss rumphius — you ARE a miss rumphius, sowing beauty where you go. xoxo