Extemporaneous musings, occasionally poetic, about life in its richly varied dimensions, especially as relates to history, theology, law, literature, science, by one who is an attorney, ordained minister, historian, writer, and African American.
Tuesday, December 17, 2019
SANDWICHES
SANDWICHES
A pretty lady shared her sandwich with me in a hallway when I was a boy at the annual Annie Malone Parade In St. Louis and quite hungry.
So when I saw her walking swiftly down the hall, of some building associated with the parade, eating, I stopped her. And I asked “where do you get the sandwiches?” She stopped when she heard me . Looked inquiringly at me, she divided her sandwich in half, gave a piece to me, and kept right on moving swiftly.
Another pretty woman, decades later , did the same thing aboard a flight from Washington, D. C. She had flown from Nashville to pick up her daughter who was a Howard University student. The mother had exchanged glances with me in the terminal as we awaited boarding. I was reading a book, as usual. She was a professor at Tennessee State. We sat side by side until they disembarked in Nashville. But the simple dignity and beauty attending her person was amplified, when she pulled out a carefully wrapped sandwich from her bag, offered half to me, that I graciously accepted. Lord! It was heavenly delicious!
The quickest way to a man’s heart and memory is to feed him! I know!