Tag Archive | Zelma Wood

Do happy thoughts of our companionship make our husbands glad and strong (Pro. 31:11)? (See also: Eph. 5:22-24; Eph. 5:33; Col. 3:18; Titus 2:4-5; 1 Pet. 3:1, 5).

A BOOK I AM READING

I’m currently reading a fictionalized autobiography called I MARRIED A MISSIONARY, written in 1943 by Zelma Wood Lawyer.  Zelma is a distant cousin from my father’s side of the family—a lady long admired for her mission work and for her courageous character after the untimely deaths of her husband and two year-old son.

Part One is mostly diary entries—accounts of the moves and their departure from the New York City docks to their arrival in Rhodesia, South Africa.  After many days at sea filled with details about what is happenig aboard ship—details about the food, fun and sea-sickness, on the way to their destination, Zelma writes about crossing the equator on her birthday.[i]

We crossed the equator last night, but I did not awake when we went over the bump. One of the sailors told us of a lady passenger who was very desirous of seeing the equator as she crossed it. He assured her that he would be glad to point it out to her.  As she held the binoculars before her eager straining eyes, scrutinizing the heaving blue beneath her he stealthily pulled a hair from his head and held it before the glasses, whereon she exclaimed, “Oh! Now I see it!  It’s red, and it has an elephant walking on it.”

The sun is shining today and the water is smooth.

Just before breakfast this morning, George handed me an envelope addressed, “Mrs. George Richards, South Atlantic Ocean.” When I opened it, I found a very lovely birthday greeting card.  A pink ribbon holds it together, and on the front is a wreath of pretty flowers.  Beneath the flowers are the words, “Fragrant thoughts like the breath of flowers add grace and sweetness to the passing hours.”

Inside is a sweet verse:

Within a corner of my heart,
All safely tucked away,
Are very many thoughts of you,
Each very bright and gay.
They fill each passing hour with light,
Like stars of heaven’s blue,
They keep me glad, they make me strong,

These happy thoughts of you.

Can our husbands say the same thing about us?  Do happy thoughts of our companionship make our husbands glad and strong (Pro. 31:11)?  (See also: Eph. 5:22-24; Eph. 5:33; Col. 3:18; Titus 2:4-5; 1 Pet. 3:1, 5).

[i] Lawyer, Zelma Wood, “I Married A Missionary” (1943). Stone-Campbell Books. 347. h p://digitalcommons.acu.edu/crs_books/347

–Beth Johnson

Women’s Studies

Muliebral Viewpoint

Articles and Books by Beth Johnson