العودة   منتديات المحــبه ~®§§][][ الأقسام الرئيسية ][][§§®~ قسم الترحيب والتعارف والاهدائات
قسم الترحيب والتعارف والاهدائات قسم متخصص بالترحيب بالأعضاء المحلقين الينا والتعارف والاهدائات

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عضو جديد
رقم العضوية : 50
الإنتساب : Oct 2009
المشاركات : 2
بمعدل : 0.04 يوميا

defg902 متواجد حالياً عرض البوم صور defg902



  مشاركة رقم : 1  
المنتدى : قسم الترحيب والتعارف والاهدائات
Wink according to the size of the appliance
قديم بتاريخ : 10-09-2009 الساعة : 02:27 PM

according to the size of the appliance. Though he weighed about 150 pounds, my grandfather carried ice blocks that weighed up to a hundred pounds or more, using a pair of hooks to slide them onto his back, which was protected by a large leather flap.My grandfather was an incredibly [لن تستطيع مشاهدة المحتوى إلا بعد الرد على الموضوع ] kind and generous man. During the Depression, when nobody had any money, he would invite boys to ride the ice truck with him just to get them off the street. They earned twenty-five cents a day. In 1976, when I was in Hope running for attorney general, I had a talk with one of those boys, Judge John Wilson. He grew up to be a distinguished, successful lawyer, but he still had vivid memories of those days. He told me that at the end of one day, when my [لن تستطيع مشاهدة المحتوى إلا بعد الرد على الموضوع ] grandfather gave him his quarter, he asked if he could have two dimes and a nickel so that he could feel he had more money. He got them and walked home, jingling the change in his pockets. But he jingled too hard, and one of the dimes fell out. He looked for that dime for hours to no avail. Forty years later, he told me he still never walked by that stretch of sidewalk without trying to spot that dime.It’s hard to convey to young people today the impact the Depression had on my parents’ and grandparents’ generation, but I grew up feeling it. One of the most memorable stories of my childhood was my mother’s tale of a Depression Good Friday when my grandfather came home from work and broke down and cried as he told her he just couldn’t afford the dollar or so it would cost to buy her a new Easter dress. She never forgot it, and every year of my childhood I had a new Easter outfit whether I [لن تستطيع مشاهدة المحتوى إلا بعد الرد على الموضوع ] wanted it or not. I remember one Easter in the 1950s, when I was fat and self-conscious. I went to church in a light-colored short-sleeved shirt, white linen pants, pink and black Hush Puppies, and a matching pink suede belt. It hurt, but my mother had been faithful to her father’s Easter ritual.When I was living with him, my grandfather had two jobs that I really loved: he ran a little grocery store, and he supplemented [لن تستطيع مشاهدة المحتوى إلا بعد الرد على الموضوع ] his income by working as a night watchman at a sawmill. I loved spending the night with Papaw at the sawmill. We would take a paper bag with sandwiches for supper, and I would sleep in the backseat of the car. And on clear starlit nights, I would climb in the sawdust piles, taking in the magical smells of fresh-cut timber and sawdust. My grandfather loved working there, too. It got him out of the house and reminded him of the mill work he’d done as a young man around the time of my mother’s birth. Except for the time Papaw closed the car door on my fingers in the dark, those nights were perfect adventures.The grocery store was a different sort of adventure. First, there was a huge jar of Jackson’s cookies on the counter, which I raided with gusto. Second, grown-ups I didn’t know came in to buy groceries, for the first time exposing me to adults who weren’t relatives. Third, a lot of my grandfather’s customers were black. Though the South was completely segregated back then, some level of racial interaction was inevitable in small towns, just as it had always been in the rural South. However, it was rare to find an [لن تستطيع مشاهدة المحتوى إلا بعد الرد على الموضوع ] uneducated rural southerner without a racist bone in his body. That’s exactly what my grandfather was. I could see that black people looked different, but because he treated them like he did everybody else, asking after their children and about their work, I thought they were just like me. Occasionally, black kids would come into the store and we would play. It took me years to learn about segregation and prejudice and the meaning of poverty, years to learn that most white people weren’t like my grandfather and grandmother, whose views on race were among the few things she had in common with her husband. In fact, Mother told me one of the worst whippings she ever got was when, at age three or four, she called a black woman “Nigger.” To put it mildly,12

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