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The Lark: Vol 2, Issue 8, September 2022

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INSIDE THIS ISSUE:

  • URBAN RENEWAL TOUR WITH KEITH STOKES: Highlights from the Aug 11 Providence walking tour by Barbara Barnes
  • REDISCOVERING A CLASSIC: Rachel Carson's The Sense of Wonder
  • THE CURRICULUM COMMITTEE ANSWERS MEMBER QUESTIONS: Why this course? Why this semester? Why this day, time, length, format...?
  • BOOK LAUNCH: Imperfect Mirrors/Indelible Myths poetry reading by LLC member Bill Carpenter on September 17

A Providence Story of Urban Renewal

by Barbara Barnes

The Downtown Providence Parks Network, a program of the Providence Foundation, was created in 2021 to “help steward the unique waterfront parks system in Providence.” The area under this program’s care extends from WaterPlace Park to greater Kennedy Plaza and across the Van Leesten Pedestrian Bridge.

During this summer the Network has offered many public programs, lectures, and walking tours to introduce as many as possible to this area.

On Thursday, August 11, Keith Stokes, Business and Development Director for the City of Providence, led a walking tour from Wickenden Street through open land between South Main and South Water Streets and across the Pedestrian Bridge to explore the history of this dynamic part of Providence and to share the current and future plans for the land. Stokes, a well-known and respected historian, reminded everyone of the stories of this land from the time of Roger Williams with an emphasis on the importance of early Indigenous communities and the experiences of African Americans and Cape Verdeans in this waterfront neighborhood.

Many who came to the walk, including several LLC members, asked questions and were anxious to learn more about how the current vacant land on both east and west sides of the Providence River would be developed for future use. Many buildings and a large swath of park area are now being used for commercial and recreational interests. The Pedestrian Bridge and adjacent park areas were filled with people as we walked and talked during the early evening tour.

What happens next??? Will the Fane Tower be built and how will it impact projects that are already completed??? Keith Stokes advised us to be optimistic and to wait and see.

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REDISCOVERING A CLASSIC: The Sense of Wonder by Rachel Carson

by Diana Grady

On a quiet summer afternoon
I finger through the bookshelf,
a treasure hunt.
I find a gem
I had forgotten.

First published a half-century ago, Rachel Carson's award-winning The Sense of Wonder remains the classic guide to introducing children to the marvels of nature.

In 1955, acclaimed conservationist Rachel Carson—author of Silent Spring—began work on an essay that she would come to consider one of her life’s most important projects. Her grandnephew, Roger Christie, had visited Carson that summer at her cottage in Maine, and together they had wandered the surrounding woods and tide pools. Teaching Roger about the natural wonders around them, Carson began to see them anew herself, and wanted to relate that same magical feeling to others who might hope to introduce a child to the beauty of nature.

From The Sense of Wonder

“One stormy autumn night when my nephew Roger was about twenty months old I wrapped him in a blanket and carried him down to the beach in the rainy darkness. Out there, just at the edge of where-we-couldn’t-see, big waves were thundering in, dimly seen white shapes that boomed and shouted and threw great handfuls of froth at us. Together we laughed for pure joy – he a baby meeting foe the first time the wild tumult of Oceanus, I with the salt of half a lifetime of sea love in me. But I think we felt the same spine-tingling response to the vast, roaring ocean and the wild night around us.” (p. 8-9)

“I spend the summer months on the coast of Maine, where I have my own shoreline and my own tract of woodland. Bayberry and juniper and huckleberry begin at the very edge of the granite rim of shore, and where the land slopes upward from the bay in a wooded knoll, the air becomes fragrant with spruce and balsam. Underfoot there is the multi-patterned northern ground cover of blueberry, checkerberry, reindeer moss and bunchberry, and on a hillside of many spruces, with shaded ferny dells and rocky outcroppings – called the Wildwoods – there are lady’s – slippers and wood lilies and the slender wands of clintonia with its deep blue berries.” (p. 14)

“A rainy day is the perfect time for a walk in the woods. I always thought so myself; the Maine woods never seem so fresh and alive as in wet weather. Then all the needles on the evergreens wear a sheath of silver; ferns seem to have grown to almost tropical lushness and every leaf has its edging of crystal drops. Strangely colored fungi – mustard-yellow and apricot and scarlet – are pushing out of the leaf mold and all the lichens and the mosses have come alive with green and silver freshness.” (p. 30)

“A child’s world is fresh and new and beautiful, full of wonder and excitement…If I had influence with the good fairy who is supposed to preside over the christening of all children I should ask that her gift to each child in the world be a sense of wonder so indestructible that it would last throughout life, as an unfailing antidote against the boredom and disenchantments of later years, the sterile preoccupation with things that are artificial, the alienation from the sources of our strength.” (p. 42-43)

FROM THE CURRICULUM COMMITTEE
Questions We Occasionally Hear

Why this course?  Why this semester?  Why this day, time, length, format, …?

These questions either directly or indirectly find their way to the curriculum committee. They all have the same answer—the coordinators!

The typical process is that one or two members have something they are interested in and propose to lead a course related to it. They then indicate when they would like to offer it, how long it should run, and whether it should be zoom or in person. Our curriculum committee members help the coordinators develop their thoughts, help them answer the questions above, and help them write the catalog description. They will also suggest schedule changes to avoid conflicts with similar courses and try to spread courses through the week. But ultimately we arrive at a plan that satisfies the coordinators.

One way to get a course that you want when you want it is to lead it yourself! We’ll help you any way you want.  Send us an email at [email protected].

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Book Launch

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Imperfect Mirrors/ Indelible Myths
Poetry by Bill Carpenter 

Saturday, September 17th
2:00-3:30
at Stillwater Books
175 Main St. Pawtucket, RI
Light refreshments provided
Reading followed by an open mic

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In the next issue of The Lark, meet Sheila Brush, the new Vice President of LLC.

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