Living
Long
“It's
paradoxical, that the idea of living a long life appeals to everyone,
but the idea of getting old doesn't appeal to anyone.” Andy Rooney
“I
am suffering from extreme old age!” Virginia Pounds Brown
My
old friend, Virginia Pounds Brown, died on Memorial Day, just a few
days short of her 98th birthday. I knew her as Mary
Virginia; she was my worst critic, but I loved and admired her
anyway. If ever there was a woman ahead of her time, and ahead of the
game, Mary Virginia was that woman. Born in 1916, she matriculated at
Randolph-Macon and Vanderbilt, and worked as a librarian at the
Birmingham Public Library and later, at Birmingham Southern College.
She married Bestor Brown and together they opened Book-Keepers
bookstore in Mountain Brook Village in Birmingham. Mary Virginia
wrote books, too, both historical and fictional. She became
interested in Alabama's native people while working on an Alabama
History for young readers. After visiting a Native American Museum on
the west coast, where there were no accounts at all of Alabama's
native tribes, she came home and, together with her good friend and
companion, Laurella Owens, wrote three books on the subject. Her
final article was published in Alabama Heritage Magazine just last
month.
It has been my privilege to know Mary Virginia Brown for the last
dozen years. I am fortunate to have several 'older-woman' friends, who
are teaching me what it means to be honorable and productive all
of one's life, and how to live from one's soul without compromise.
Mary Virginia was one who did not hold back when it came to voicing
an opinion, and her opinions usually carried a punch. She once
commented on my writing, saying that I should not quit my day job.
She did not sugar coat her criticisms, nor do that most Southern of
all female tricks, lie straight to your face—sweetly. She just
handed you the facts as she saw them, and let the chips fall where
they may. I respected her for that.
Sometimes,
when a person dies, the memory of them fades away over time. I
sincerely doubt that will happen for anyone who knew Virginia Pounds
Brown. There will ever be a Mary Virginia-sized hole in the cosmos
where she existed as one of a kind.
In
the Spirit,
Jane
1 comment:
I know how much she meant to you and how her criticism both stung and educated. Thanks for letting us know more about her. May she rest in peace.
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