As I welcomed the crowd to the farm, I reminded the students
that they could aspire to be writers while living in the middle of Georgia – and
perhaps, like Flannery O’Connor, or Eatonton’s Alice Walker, be known all over
the world someday. The morning proceeded well, with many of the students
encountering things they had never seen before: ancient appliances, farming
implements, peahens, a cow-milking parlor . . . and the modest bedroom/studio
where one of Milledgeville’s residents managed to make herself into one of
America’s great writers.
Seventh graders ask questions. Am I a member of Flannery
O’Connor’s family? No. Why is there a broken rope hanging from the top of the
barn? Well, when we can afford put a new
rope up there, you’ll be able to tell that it was used to move hay into the
barn. Are there snakes around here? You bet - snakes that can sense when the
peahens are about to lay eggs.
After sharing their compositions with their teachers and
classmates, the students headed to the front porch of the main house for
refreshments and then were back on the bus for the return to school. They may
not have spent the morning analyzing Flannery O’Connor’s writings, but the seed
is planted, that they should think of O’Connor as a person they can relate to,
a regular person whose home is interesting. Someday, I trust, many of these
students will read O’Connor’s writings attentively because of the morning’s
experience.
A high point of the day for me was chatting with the man who
drove the bus to bring the kids to the farm. As he told me - and the always
helpful Prof. Melanie DeVore of the Georgia College Biology Department - when
he was around ten years old, he visited the farm regularly because his father
worked in the dairy operation of Andalusia. As he walked us through the barn
and the tenant house, the man discussed the old entrance to the farm operation,
how the cows would be moved around the farm, and his memories of the final days
of Jack and Louise Hill.
One always learns from teaching—and sometimes from simply
entertaining. I’m delighted to have learned as much as anyone on this day at
Andalusia.
A cool November morning on the Farm. |
-- Bruce Gentry edits the Flannery
O’Connor Review and teaches the course on O’Connor’s fiction at Georgia
College. Next year he will host a conference, “Flannery O’Connor and Other
Southern Women Writers,” scheduled for 17-19 Sept. 2015.
Very nice job, Dr. Gentry! -- Craig A.
ReplyDeleteWhat a treat it must have been for you when the bus driver suddenly shared his Andalusia experiences.....
ReplyDeleteDrs. Gentry and Lammon have given us reasons to remember how inspiring it is for our youth when they realize that someone who wrote in Milledgeville continues to be read around the world.
ReplyDelete