Justfolk

Justfolk club

Posted: 21 May 2020


Taken: 20 May 2020

1 favorite     2 comments    42 visits


Keywords

96N4-30b
Ilford Delta 400
Minolta X370
I missed the kissing shot because my flash was slow to recyc


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

42 visits


Kissing his mentor's fore-brain

Kissing his mentor's fore-brain
Two or three seconds after I took this picture in 1996, my former teacher, from 25 years before, kissed a mentor of his, from 35 years before.

It's my favourite picture of both of them. It was at the official reception for Folktales of Newfoundland, the two-volume work co-edited by Herbert Halpert (on the right).

Harold Paddock, on the left, was telling the people present how much he admired Halpert and his works. He raised himself a little from the chair, lifted his hands to the sides of Halpert's head, and gave him a loud kiss on the forehead, a kiss – he said – to Halpert's fore-brain. It was, he went on, in recognition of how influential Halpert had been in building a strong scholarship around the culture of this province.

Halpert died four years later, in 2000.

And Harold Paddock died this week.

They are both missed.

Annalia S. has particularly liked this photo


Comments
 Annalia S.
Annalia S.
A beautiful shot, capable of telling a story on its own, but I also very much enjoyed the memory you shared of this wonderful chain of mentorship. Sorry for your loss, Justfolks. The people who taught us are like fathers and mothers to our minds and losing them has the added sorrow of knowing that all that knowledge and wisdom is going with them.
4 years ago.
 Justfolk
Justfolk club
Thank you, Annalia. You are totally right.

And, in our time of sheltering from the pandemic, deaths are lonely things for those left behind, unable to meet with friends to celebrate the lives ended. We must look for celebration in other ways.
4 years ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.