| Jewel Street Cemetery, Mansfield, MA |
There's a richness in that information. I challenge you, dear writer, to enter a graveyard (preferably an older one--they have the best off-beat stuff) and read some of the headstones. Do some math and figure out the ages. Check out the relationships of those buried nearby one another. Take note of some of the quotes chosen by the burying family included on the stones.
There's a story in there, maybe a poem, a haiku, a limerick, and/or a song.
Here's one that haunted me (pun intended.)
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No one talks like that anymore! This is some serious, heavy 1800 wording! Very inspirational.
Through our wanderings we also found a gravestone (in the same cemetery as featured above) of a girl who's age turned out to be eleven. Okay, nothing amiss there, UNTIL... you read that she was the wife of so and so and the grave next to her was that of an infant who died the same day. The husband went on to live a long time AND there was another wife in the same vicinity. Is this not a Decemberist song or what?
There is another cemetery near our home that is filled with sea captains and their families. How interesting is that? The names are usually fantastic as well.
I give you this gem, Fanny wife of Rufus King, born October 14, 1780, died March 4, 1867. When all the dust return to earth as it was and the spirit shall return unto God who gave it…
| Jewel Street Cemetery, Mansfield, MA |
Let me know how it goes. I'm always interested in reading a dark and lovely tale of the dead...
Your Favorite Mermaid
Just ask Jonathan to do the math for you! See you soon Cuz!
ReplyDeleteI bet he would be a blast to take through a graveyard! It would certainly keep his mind busy...
ReplyDeleteHistoric cemeteries are a favorite pastime for my family-- we aren't morbid, I swear! One beautiful, old cemetery near our home has a pair of tombstones literally melting away. While I'm sure there is some perfectly scientific explanation for this, like specific stone reacting with chemical-laden rain, etc, etc, e local legend is that the two were so evil the fires of hell came up to meet them.
ReplyDeleteLove the pics!
unFinishedObject- I won't think you're morbid if you don't think we are! We love to wander through graveyards. I think you have a story there about the fires of hell--sounds like a good one! From a scientific standpoint, I wander if the headstones were made from limestone, that would explain the dissolving...but I like the evil angle better. :)
ReplyDelete