Elizabeth Sherrill
Elizabeth Sherrill's All The Way to Heaven

Whatever you're facing...
Heaven Can Begin Now


The Wax-Faced Doll

On a July Sunday in 1995, John and I walked down the hillside from our B&B in England's Lake District, following the church bells to the picture-postcard village of Hawkshead. The sermon in the ancient church that day was on friendship.

The outcome of our spiritual journeys, declared the preacher, Canon Southward, depends in large measure on those who travel with us. He gave as examples two writers, Charles Kingsley and Robert Burns. Asked to explain how he'd maintained his productivity over a long life, Kingsley answered, "I had a friend." And Burns, dying of alcoholism at thirty-seven, accounted for his self-destruction in identical words: "I had a friend."

"Friends matter!" Dr. Southward summed up. They provide guidance, for good or ill, along our path.

A parade of faces rose before me as we climbed back up the hill. Friends who've been good guides, others bad. And some who've been both.

One face in particular. . . Because I've come to believe that in every relationship Jesus shows us both something of himself and something of ourselves, I want to draw the portrait of my earliest, most problematic traveling companion. One whose influence was both healing and, I know today, deeply harmful.

The Locket

I keep it in my dresser drawer -- a tiny leather box with a frayed satin lining. Inside the box is an old-fashioned gold locket that opens to display two oval frames. One oval holds the photograph of a handsome woman in her late forties standing beneath the flowering magnolia tree in the yard of our house in Scarsdale. In my nine-year-old handwriting in the facing oval are the words Pied de Terre.

The worn leather box, the antique locket, the not-quite-right French, sum up for me the woman in the photo. Her name was Mea Ada Arthuretta Ivimey, and though there were nearly forty years between our ages, she was my closest friend from early childhood until my marriage to John.

Pied de terre -- when I took French in school, I discovered the correct phrase is pied a terre -- was our secret password. Literally "a foothold on earth," the phrase signified, Mea explained, one's own set-aside space.

The hideaway I sought!

It was our fantasy that when I grew up she and I would have such a place. We spent blissful hours designing it. Sometimes our pied a terre

continued >>>

All Installments
Home | About Elizabeth | Photo Album | Books | Heaven Begins Now | Movies/Audio |
Stage Adaptations | Featured Article | Behind the Scenes | Comments
Copyright 2006-07 - Elizabeth Sherrill