It is a hankie, not a tissue
My maternal grandmother was a big believer in handkerchiefs. She
had dozens stored away in the drawers of her dressing bureau. I
remember when circumstances called for a wipe of the eyes or nose, a
hankie was always at hand.
When we moved my grandmother from her home to her apartment, all
the hankies went with her. When we moved her from her apartment to a
nursing home, she took along the bare necessities and when we finally
said our last good-byes, there were a few items that I couldn’t part
with. Her drawers full of hankies were among them.
There were not too many personal items left to covet when I gave
her my final good-bye kiss. The furniture had long been divided up.
Her jewelry had found other fingers to grace. But the hankies were
one of the forgotten treasures, at least in my eyes.
I guess the grandsons had no need for them and the only other
granddaughter thought they were rather pointless. But since I was the
oldest of my generation, I have memories that the grandchildren that
followed never shared.
For me, my grandmother was not an older woman in failing health.
My grandmother was a vital Southern belle that taught me rules and
regulations of social appropriateness and hospitality. She was a
great cook, a great card player and a great gardener. She would spend
hours in the making of jam, pickles, pies and ice cream.
There was always a pitcher of iced tea at dinner (which was really
lunch) and at supper (which was really dinner). We used cloth
napkins. We hand-washed dishes. We set the breakfast table before we
went to bed.
There were always mints in the silver candy dish on the buffet in
the dining room. There were always African violets near the eastern
windows. There was never up, down, right or left. It was always
north, south, east and west.
The cities were the place to shop, but the country was the place
to live. Ladies always carried a pocketbook, not a purse. When it was
cold you wore a car coat, not a sweater or jacket. And a lady always
carried a hankie, not a tissue.
Her hankies were never plain, and you could tell the decade they
were purchased by the designs. The ‘40s versions had beautiful
hand-crocheted edges. The ‘50s had petite floral patterns and
embroidered flowers. The ‘60s boxes were filled with bright colors
and bold patterns.
The collection dwindled after that, probably because their general
popularity decreased. For most people, it was easier to use a tissue
once and then throw it away. But in my grandmother’s world, there was
always a hankie in her pocketbook.
As a life’s worth of belongings were doled out, I was the only one
that cared to take the drawer full of small cotton squares and
precious memories. Maybe it’s just a silly sentiment; maybe it’s
because I’m the only one with daughters of my own to pass them down
to. And maybe because I’m the only one who remembers her saying that
one of her many prayers for me, her first grandchild, was that my
life would be blessed enough that I could “always carry a hankie and
never have to use it.”
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs
Sundays.
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