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       # 2020-03-02 - The Story of Opal by Opal Stanley Whiteley
       
       # The Story of Opal, The Journal of an Understanding Heart by Opal
       # Stanley Whiteley
       
 (IMG) Image of Opal Whiteley mural in Cottage Grove
       
 (HTM) Beauty Attends: The Heartsongs of Opal Whiteley by Anne Hills
       
       # Preface
       
       For those whom Nature loves, the Story of Opal is an open book.
       
       [Opal was] the child of curious and interesting circumstance, but of
       circumstance her journal is altogether independent. ... There the
       book is.  Nothing else is like it, nor apt to be.  If there is
       alchemy in Nature, it is in children's hearts the unspoiled treasure
       lies, and for that room of the treasure-house, the Story of Opal
       offers a tiny golden key.
       
       [Opal's birth mother liked to show and explain nature to Opal on
       walks in the fields and woods.  She asked Opal to write what she had
       seen and heard.  Opal's mother died in a boating accident.  Opal was
       given to the wife of an Oregon lumber-man who named Opal Whiteley
       after their recently deceased daughter.  Opal's foster mother
       frequently spanked and punished her by putting her under the bed.
       Opal's school teacher also frequently disciplined her.
       
       Opal was a spirited child who had sympathy for plants, animals,
       bodies of water, hungry tramps, and the world at large.  She often
       expressed gratitude for being alive in this magical world.  More than
       once, she wrote that when she grew up, she wanted to write books for
       children.  She named individual trees and had conversations with them.
       
       Opal was, perhaps wrongfully, diagnosed with schizophrenia and lived
       50 years of her adult life in a mental institution.
       ]
       
 (HTM) http://members.efn.org/~opal/mental.htm
       
       Opal frequently uses the word "print" to mean "write."
       
       # Chapter 6
       
       Earth-voices are glad voices, and earth-songs come up from the ground
       through the plants; and in their flowering and in the days before
       these days are come, they do tell the earth-songs to the wind.  And
       the wind in her goings does whisper them to folks to print for other
       folks.  So other folks do have knowing of earth's songs.  When I grow
       up I am going to write for children—and grown-ups that haven't
       grown up too much—all the earth-songs I now do hear.
       
       I have thinks these potatoes growing here did have knowings of
       star-songs.  I have kept watch in the field at night and I have seen
       the stars look kindness down upon them.  And I have walked between
       the rows of potatoes, and I have watched the star-gleams on their
       leaves.  And I have heard the wind ask of them the star-songs the
       star-gleams did tell in shadows on their leaves.  And as the wind did
       go walking in the field talking to the earth-voices there, I did
       follow her down the rows.  I did have feels of her presence near.
       And her goings by made ripples on my nightgown.
       
       # Chapter 14
       
       I so do love trees.  I have thinks I was once a tree growing in the
       forest; now all trees are my brothers.
       
       # Chapter 16
       
       It is lonesome feels I have.  But I do try to have thinks as how I
       can bring happiness to folks about.  That is such a help when
       lonesome feels do come.  Angel Mother did say, "Make earth glad,
       little one—that is the way to keep the fire-tongue of the glad song
       ever in your heart.  It must not go out."  I so do try to keep it
       there.  I so do try, for it is helps on cold days and old days.  And
       I did have remembers as how it was Angel Mother did say, "When one
       keeps the glad song singing in one's heart then do the hearts of
       others sing."
       
       And all the time the lichen folks are saying things.  And the things
       they say are their thoughts about the gladness of a winter day.  I
       put my ear close to the rocks and I listen.  That is how I do hear
       what they are saying.  Then I do take a reed for a flute.  I climb on
       a stump—on the most high stump that is near.  I pipe on the flute
       to the wind what the lichens are saying.  I am piper for the lichens
       that dwell on the gray rocks, and the lichens that cling to the trees
       grown old.
       
       # Chapter 29
       
       [After Opal finished her morning chores, she was about to go out
       exploring.  Her foster mother grabbed her and tied her up in the wood
       shed.  Opal overheated in the noon sun and became nauseous and
       light-headed.  She got a bloody nose and it got on her hair and
       clothes.]
       
       Every day now I do look for thoughts in flowers.  Sometimes they are
       hidden away in the flower-bell—and sometimes I find them on a wild
       rose—and sometimes they are among the ferns—and sometimes I climb
       away up in the trees to look looks for them.  So many thoughts do
       abide near unto us.  They come from heaven and live among the flowers
       and the ferns, and often I find them in the trees.  I do so love to
       go on searches for the thoughts that do dwell near about.
       
       author: Whiteley, Opal Stanley
 (TXT) detail: gopher://gopherpedia.com/0/Opal_Whiteley
       LOC:    PS3545.H625
 (DIR) source: gopher://gopher.pglaf.org/1/4/3/8/1/43818/
       tags:   biography,ebook,non-fiction,outdoor
       title:  The Story of Opal
       
       # Tags
       
 (DIR) biography
 (DIR) ebook
 (DIR) non-fiction
 (DIR) outdoor