On Pilgrimage (June 1980)
Summary: Increasingly weak and confined to her room, she notes all the activity around herโvisitors, cards, news of protesters, anniversary celebrations, speakers, and proofs for the next edition of the CW paper. (DDLW #605: The Catholic Worker, June 1980, 1, 4.).
Diary Notes
Wed., 3/26โWoke up remembering that we go to press soon with our miniscule (compared to The New York Times) eight-page paper, and I think my usual wandering thoughts of what I could write about myself, as a woman born in 1897, a woman of long life, of varied experiences.
Thurs., 3/27โโWhose face is on this coin?โ Jesus asked. โRender to Caesar the things that are Caesarโs, and to God the things that are Godโs.โ โThe less you have of Caesarโs, the less you have to render to Caesar.โ The New Testament and the words of JesusโThe Sermon on the Mountโthe foundation of our workโvoluntary poverty and manual labor. โSowing and Reaping.โ โSow sparingly and you will reap sparingly.โ
All of Chaim Potokโs books are very enlightening (My Name is Asher Lev, The Promise, The Chosen, In the Beginning, Wanderings). Reading Potok made me turn to Scripture more and more, to supplement my daily reading of the psalms of David.
Sun., 3/30โPalm Sundayโwe had a beautiful Mass in the auditorium at Maryhouse, beginning with the blessing of the palms in our back garden.
Sat., 4/5โEaster Saturdayโlistened to Wagnerโs opera Parsifal on the radio.
Sat., 4/12โTina de Aragon called. We are all โdying daily,โ but she has the accompanying pain of cancer. Her beautiful carving of Our Lady, which we have in the Chapel here at Maryhouse, keeps Tina very close to me. Tinaโs statue was carved from Lignum Vitae, a South American wood, the hardest in the world. She suffered pains in her arm for a year after carving it.
Transit strike has ended. It was very exciting to watch its coverage on televisionโthe whole city moving to work on foot, through rain part of the time, moving over bridges from borough to borough.
David Spier, my nephew, came down from Stuvyvesant Falls, N.Y. to tell me of his motherโs death (my most dear sister Della) yesterday. David had been out to Victoria, British Columbia to see her recently..
Sun., 4/13โDoris Harmon, my sister Dellaโs sister-in-law, and her daughter Alice came to see me. How very kind of them all. They knew how close Della and I always were from earliest childhood, playing together, confiding together.
Tue., 4/15โJane Sammon came in tonightโvisiting the sick. I had felt very ill this morningโam physically a little better tonightโvery weak, however. Dean Mowrer is also coming down with the flu.
Thurs., 4/17โTina telephoned, having just heard of Dellaโs death. Just a brief callโof consolation and understanding.
The only mail today was a letter from John Givins, old faithful friend, who still addresses me as Dorthy Day. He was a seamanโlives in Seattle now. He fought in the Spanish Civil War. Now he is a retired longshoreman, after traveling the entire West Coast, and is happily married with wife and children.
Wed., 4/23โKathleen DeSutter Jordan visited, bringing me To the Finland Station, by Edmund Wilson, which is, as he described it, about the revolutionary tradition in history and the rise of Socialism.
Fri., 4/25โFather Geoff, Jane, Dan Mauk, Mike Harank, Mary Mullins, David Beseda, David Rice, Kathy Bellefeuille have gone to Groton, Connecticut to protest the launching of another Trident Submarine.
Peggy Scherer is down from the Marlboro farm with asparagus, which Frank is cooking for my supper.
Thurs., 5/1โMay day. First issue of The Catholic Worker in 1933. Papers were distributed in Union Square today as they were in 1933. We had a special dinner and Mass and a party here. The auditorium was packed with people from both houses and the farm, and guests.
Read reviews in Commonweal of books by Michael Harrington and Malcolm Cowley. My sister Della would have been interested in the latter. How one misses a sister!
Fri., 5/2โBright and sunny. I slept hard until 8 a.m. Woke to symphonies and a pleasant sense of a good day yesterday, a celebration of Catholic Worker beginnings. There are beautiful flowers (an iris and two roses) on my television set, and a plastic swan, given to me by one of the women in the house, which reminds me of Wagnerโs Lohengrin.
Wed., 5/7โWoke to the sound of an ambulance at the door. One of the women at Maryhouse was on medication which disagreed with her and, on the call of the young woman who โhad the house,โ(No one likes to be designated as โin charge.โ) the ambulance came with its intern, plus the usual police car, plus two other police carsโthe first car had broken down.
Fri., 5/9โA cool, sunny day. Feeling weak. Visited Deane Mowrer in her room down the hall. Doris Harmon calledโwe had a good talk on the phone about Della. Proofs for the May issue of The Catholic Worker are back from the printer.
Sun., 5/11โAnne Fraser Kaune was in for a breakfast of pancakes. Anne and her husband Steve are moving to Brooklyn near Jacques Traversโ house of hospitality and Prospect Park, where my family lived before moving to Florida for good. Anne and Steveโs apartment house across from St.ย Joseph House on First Street has been turned into a cooperative. The Lower East Side is becoming fashionable. Our real estate and water taxes will be going up!
Tue., 5/13โA lovely visit with my grandson Hilaire Hennessy, on his way home to Vermont after sheep-shearing in the South. He got one dollar per sheep for shearing them. Hitchiking home, he arrived at St.ย Joseph House on First Street after midnight, and slept on a bench on the first floor.
Watched Gene OโNeillโs play The Iceman Cometh on television tonight. The setting of the play was Luke OโConnorโs tavern which used to be on West Fourth Street and Seventh Avenue. I recognized two of the characters in the play as Terry Carlin and Hippolyte Havel.
Thurs., 5/15โDeane, Peggy, Mike Harandk, Mike Vincent, and others have gone to Virginia for their trial tomorrow for demonstrating at the Pentagon in March.
Fri., 5/16โFather Henri Nouwen is our Friday night speaker, so we had a large crowd for Mass and for the meeting.
Nina Polcyn Moore is here for a visit. We talked of our visit together to Russia some years ago. My trip was financed through friends. Nina, owning a book shop at the time, St. Benetโs in Chicago, and making money, came with me. She is Polish and now lives in Sauk Centre, Minnesota, where Sinclair Lewisโ Main Street was written (a great, best-seller).
Iโm reading Five Red Herrings by Dorothy Sayers.
Mon., 5/19โso many disaster in the news; heavily contaminated Love Canal near Buffalo, New York, the eruption of Mt. St.ย Helenโs in Washington, race riots in Miami, Florida, floods in New Orleans! Here in New York all is serene but muggy. I am losing my taste for coffee in the morning. When my daughter Tamar comes I will be a tea drinker.
I am now reading Josephine Teyโs Brat Farrar.
Thurs., 5/22โLee LeCuyer is visiting from St.ย Johnโs college in Annapolis.
My sister Dellaโs daughter, Sue Myake, and her two daughters, Dorothy and Joanna arrived from Victoria, British Columbia. Sueโs husband, Mike, is a micro-meteorologist (anything that fallsโa snowflake or raindropโis a meteor). Tamar arrived tonight from Vermont. Theyโve come for a memorial service for Della and Franklin Spier to be held in our Maryhouse auditorium this Saturday.
Mon., 5/26Tamar went out to breakfast with Deane. She is leaving tomorrow to return to Vermont. I did not go downstairs to mass this evening.
Mike Harank has planted morning glories in front of Maryhouse again. The strings for them to climb on go up to the third floor. Beauty!
Sat., 5/31โTristan and Isolde on radio this afternoon. I used to go to standing room for all the Wagner operas in the top balcony of the Metropolitan Opera Houseโfascinating to look down.
Margaret Lloyd, Doris Harmon and Tom Sullivan telephoned. And a letter came from Pat Rusk today from Detroit.
Sun., 6/1โThere is an old saying that in a field where poison grows, there is also found its antidote. In the past, weโve had the horrible news of the community in Jonestown, Guyana, which had begun in California and ended in tragic deaths. And today, my grandaughter Susie, her husband Jack McMurry and my three beautiful great-grandchildren, Tanya, Kachina and Charlotte Rose, stopped by for a visit on their way to The Farm, Summertown, Tenn. The headquarters of a community, which also started in California, that is dedicated to the welfare of the family and not death. They had been living on one of the communityโs farms in Franklin N.Y.
Some letters, cards and gifts received:
Father John Vaughn, Minister General of the Franciscans, sent me prayers and blessings through Bill BarrettโฆFrom Bill Griffinโbeautiful heatherโฆThe tiny, potted, gingko tree that David Gauchat brought me from Our Lady of the Wayside, Avon, Ohio a few years ago, is now almost two feet tall.
Letters from my grandaughter Maggie Hennessy, and from Marge Hughes, both now living in West Virginia; from Alice Kathryn Casper; from Dr. William Stringfellow, telling of the recent death of poet Anthony Towne; from John Iannuzzi of Ellicott City, Maryland, reminiscing of old friends the Scarpas, and Father Louis Farino and Father John Hugo;and from Marie Knisley, Lucille Lynch, Jane and Marion Judge, all sending generous gifts and a beautiful card with this quote from Sigrid Undset:
And when we give each other Christmas gifts in His name, let us remember that He has given us the sun and the moon and the stars, and the earth with its forests and mountains and oceansโand all that lives and move upon them. He has given us all green things and everything that blossoms and bears fruit and all that we quarrel about and all that we have misusedโand to save us from our foolishness, from all our sins, He came down to earth and gave us Himself.
