I was in Norfolk, Virginia, last week for a gathering of the Tidewater Chapter of the Dickinson Organization of Poetry Enthusiasts, and on the way home, I stopped in Williamsburg. The restored colonial town called to mind Emily Dickinson's poem "Yesterday is History" (below on the left), lines she was inspired to write after reading her third cousin's poem "Tomorrow is Eternity" (below on the right).
By Emily Dickinson: Yesterday is History, 'Tis so far away – Yesterday is Poetry – 'Tis Philosophy – Yesterday is mystery – Where it is Today While we shrewdly speculate Flutter both away | By Emmett Lee Dickinson: Tomorrow is Eternity, ‘Tis so far away – Tomorrow is Puzzlement – ‘Tis Uncertainty – Tomorrow is mystery – Where we must Succumb While we crudely contemplate What we might become |
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While in Williamsburg we visited the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum, the first and the world's oldest continually-operated museum dedicated to the preservation, collection, and exhibition of American folk art. The museum is open even though it is under construction. The museum is adding a new entrance as well as new exhibition space. |
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The museum included MANY paintings of members of the Dickinson family.
Left: Euclid Portendorfer, oldest son of Pythagoria Dickinson Portendorfer. Center: Hypatia Xenophen Dickinson, daughter of Muttley James Dickinson, a brother of Emmett Lee Dickinson -- and her cat Gato. Right: Windsor Clegg, oldest son of Ethelene Ehteline Dickinson Clegg. Windsor is shown reading a book of poetry by Emmett Lee Dickinson.
Left: A wood carving of Emmett Lee Dickinson's daughter, Qwerty Jean Dickinson. Center: Emmett Lee Dickinson's sister Polly Esther Dickinson. Right: Jefferson Dickinson's youngest daughter Eukaryote and her cat, Protozoa.
Left: Eleanor and Rigby, daughters of Peneleope Laine Dickinson McKenzie. Right: Azile Emdiella Dickinson of Lewis Clark Dickinson.
Below: Items from the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum collection. The picture on the right is of a glass jar packed with colored sand.
Pictured below: Miscellaneous shots from inside the tailor's shop on Duke of Gloucester Street. Just FYI: the historical interpreter in the shop on the morning of September 2nd was excellent. His discussions on the industry and of the history of uniforms and clothing was fascinating.