14 I reminded the Reverend Nelson how each morning he would open our little country town's grammar school with a prayer over his
assembled students. I told him that whatever
positive things I had done since had been influenced at least in part by his morning school prayers.
15 In the letter to my grandmother, I reminded her of a dozen ways she used to teach me how to tell the truth, to share, and to be forgiving and
considerate of others. I thanked her for the years of eating her good cooking, the equal of which I had not found since. Finally, I thanked her simply for having
sprinkled my life with
stardust.
16 Before I slept, my three letters went into our ship's office mail sack. They got mailed when we reached Tulagi Island.
17 We
unloadedcargo,
reloaded with something else, then again we put to sea in the
routine familiar to us, and as the days became weeks, my little personal experience
receded. Sometimes, when we were at sea, a mail ship would
rendezvous and bring us mail from home, which, of course, we
accordedtopmost priority.
18 Every time the ship's
loudspeakerrasped, "Attention! Mail call!" two
hundred-oddshipmates came pounding up on
deck and
clustered about the two
seamen, standing by those precious
bulging gray sacks. They were
alternately pulling out
fistfuls of letters and
barkingsuccessive names of sailors who were,
in turn, shouting back "Here! Here!"
amid the pushing.
19 One "mail call" brought me responses from Grandma, Dad, and the Reverend Nelson -- and my reading of their letters left me not only astonished but more
humbled than before.
20 Rather than
saying they would forgive that I hadn't
previously thanked them, instead, for
Pete's sake, they were thanking me -- for having remembered, for having considered they had done anything so exceptional.
21 Always the college professor, my dad had carefully avoided
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