March 16th 2012 my sweet baby boy entered the
world. He’s changed our lives in perfect
ways. But he has also kept me away from
my blog posts. I reenter the blogosphere
with a loving hurrah to my father that has spun in my heart for the past few
months…..
Hyacinth Bucket – pronounced “bouquet” – devotes her every
breath to “keeping up appearances”. In the
BBC sitcom so named, Hyacinth mentally dwells amongst Britain’s finest and
struggles aptly to represent herself as such in her squarely middle class surroundings. In one particular episode she has gathered
brochures for expensive vacations in order to flaunt them ceremoniously, though
the trips will not likely come to fruition.
She lays the brochures in plain view for her neighbor, Elizabeth, to
see. She says, “I want Elizabeth to spot
the brochures immediately when I fetch her in for coffee.” In another ploy, she exclaims, “Oh,
dear! I’m afraid Richard was driving so
fast, my holiday brochures blew out of the window! Have you seen my holiday brochures? You can’t miss them. There’s one about the Orient Express, and the
other’s cruising on the QE2 [Queen Elizabeth 2]. Ohhh!
There they are! Not a scratch or
a crease. It certainly pays to go for
the best.”
This sitcom is one of my dad’s favorites. I find this endearing and wonderful. You see, my father is one of the most
sincerely dignified men I’ve ever met.
He embodies social graces for the sake of bestowing comfort on those
around him. Social rules exist so that
people can have shared expectations for social situations. He once explained to me that wicks on new
candles should always be immediately lit so as not to display their new
whiteness. Unlike Hyacinth Bucket, this
nicety is to avoid ostentatiously flaunting the newness of a taper. But even more interesting to me was the
second part of this lesson on candle etiquette.
Say I enter the home of someone who left her or his candle wicks
unburned. The next time said person is a
guest in my home I should replace all my candles with new ones bearing their
white wicks, left unburned. This is
because the comfort of that person and the hospitality I extend to her or him supersedes
all else.
My dad told me bedtime stories when I was a young girl. They often featured the loveable protagonist
Lady Swan. Lady Swan was perpetually
planning lovely events for her friends.
Teas, parties, sweet get-togethers aimed at treating her guests to
elegant yet simple hospitality and delectable food. Each party, however, was interrupted by the
rude Miss Pig. Through these adorable quips,
Dad educated us on proper social behavior while fostering the closeness that
comes through bedtime rituals.
These memories bring me back to dear Hyacinth. I’ve watched this show with my dad and
laughed myself to tears partially at her ridiculous endeavors, but even more so
at my dad overcome by hilarity. I love
that this Anglophile man embodies all the graces expected of the most
distinguished Southern gentleman, but can also laugh at these graces taken to
an exaggerated extreme. I love and am so
grateful for this man of balance, allowing his care for people to supplant all
else.
Now that I can see again through my tears . . . What a wonderful tribute to your father and uplifting and meaningful portrait to carry in your heart. He was truly special as are you.
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