词条 | Ruth Narramore |
释义 |
| name = Ruth Elliott Narramore | image = Ruth E Narramore.jpg | imagesize = | caption = | pseudonym = | birth_name = Ruth Elliott | birth_date = {{Birth date|1923|8|23}} | birth_place = Brooklyn, New York | death_date = {{Death date and age|2010|5|30|1923|8|23}} | death_place = Pasadena, California | occupation = Poet, radio broadcaster, musician | spouse = Clyde M. Narramore | children = Melodie Narramore Yocum Dr. Kevin Narramore | period = | genre = | subject = | movement = | signature = | website = }}Ruth Elliott Narramore (August 23, 1923 – May 30, 2010) was the editor of the Angel award-winning Psychology For Living Magazine from 1982 to 1999. Before then she co-wrote and edited books for her husband, Dr. Clyde Narramore. Earlier, she conducted and wrote instrumental arrangements for the orchestra at the Eagle Rock Baptist Church in Los Angeles.[1] Prior to that, she was a trumpeter and vocalist for Jack Wyrtzen's traveling music group at Word of Life in Schroon Lake, New York.[1] Ruth was the sister of Dr. Rev. Gordon Elliott, a career minister and professor at the Fruitland Baptist Bible Institute in Hendersonville, North Carolina. For 64 years she was married to pioneering Christian psychologist Dr. Clyde M. Narramore. The Narramores had two children, Melodie and Kevin. Melodie was a Gospel recording artist with the Bread 'N Honey Music Label and was the Director of Theater Arts at California Baptist University until her death in 2007. Kevin, a musician, behavioral scientist, author and medical researcher directs the Narramore Institute in Los Angeles. In the 1950s, Clyde and Ruth created the Narramore Christian Foundation and the international radio broadcast Psychology for Living.[2] In addition to co-authoring several books with her husband,[3] Ruth Narramore wrote poetry throughout her life. Influenced by the style of Ogden Nash, Ruth's poetry collection Come Share My Joy blends a whimsical Joie de vivre with heartfelt spiritual and existential reflection. Early lifeSix months after her birth in Brooklyn, New York, Ruth and her missionary parents,[4] Edwin and Alice Elliott, ventured across the pacific on the Canadian ocean liner, the RMS Empress of Asia arriving in Tianjin, China. At age two, Ruth was speaking both Mandarin Chinese and English.[2] Her best friends were Chinese even though they referred to her as a "Little Foreign Devil". Growing up in China, Ruth Elliott observed her father as he designed and built everything from prosthetic limbs for the handicapped to church structures. Her sister, Winnifred, was born in China but died at the age of three. Here, the Elliotts learned to sacrifice for a greater cause as her parents had dedicated their lives to helping the Chinese people.[5] As the Japanese moved into China in the thirties, foreign consulates urged their citizens to leave the country, since their safety could no longer be guaranteed.[6] As a result, her family returned to New York, where her brother, Gordon Elliott, was born. In the New York City School system Ruth's creative talents clearly emerged as she began to win citywide awards for her artwork. Ruth attended King's College, and received her master's degree in music education from Columbia University. The list of musical instruments that she since learned to play included: trumpet, piano, organ, harp, vibraharp, cello, Swiss bells and alpenhorn. During WWII Ruth met a young Naval officer, Clyde M. Narramore at a Jack Wyrtzen rally at Times Square in New York City. They dated and were married in 1946 in Manhattan, NY.[2] PoetrythumbRuth Elliott Narramore's poetry was known for its clever wit, heartfelt warmth and keen insights and observations into life, family and faith. In Come Share My Joy, Ruth authored a collection of 77 poems on the wonder of growing up, family, motherhood, faith, and comfort. Her stories always affirmed God's unconditional love and wisdom. The book includes 23 art illustrations from artist, Freiman Stoltzfus, known for his Amish-Mennonite influences.[7] In the book, her poems are divided into seven areas of life:
To Have to be what I am not Is much too hard for me. Pretending to be someone else I wasn't meant to be Is not a role for simple folk Like me, who cannot see A whit of benefit derived From lost identity!}} {{quotation|God knows my heart-- From Him I cannot hide One secret small. Before Him, all My thoughts are open wide. God knows my heart-- When others cannot know The pain I bear, Or seem to care-- God understands my woe. God knows my heart-- And sees my every flaw; Yet loves me still And always will, Supplanting grace for law. God knows my heart-- Far better than I do Then so I must My Savior trust, If my heart would be true!}} {{quotation|"Please write a poem for Mother's Day," Asked Mrs. Thus-and-so. I tried – I toiled – I labored on But words refused to flow! I struggled to write something down-- 'Twas maundlin and 'twas trite. I wore a dozen pencils out, But nothing came out right. The topic wasn't what was wrong: (The books are on my shelf). It's hard to pen a mother's praise When I am one myself. I'm surely not the heroine A poem would make of me, And many mothers have their flaws If truth be known – and free. Yet motherhood I do adore, And I, for one, am for it. But ask me not to write a poem. Good heavens, I deplore it!}} References1. ^{{Cite web | last = | first = | title = Collection 446 – Jack Wyrtzen. T3 Transcript | date = | year = | url = http://www.wheaton.edu/bgc/archives/trans/446t03a.htm | accessdate = 2/3/11}} 2. ^1 2 3 {{Cite journal | last = | first = | authorlink = | author2 = | title = Remembering Ruth Elliott Narramore | journal = Psychology For Living | volume = 52 | issue = 2 | pages = 1–2 | publisher = | location = | date = Summer 2010 | url = | issn = | doi = | id = | accessdate = }} 3. ^{{Cite book | last = Narramore | first = Clyde M. | last2 = Narramore | first2 = Ruth Elliott | authorlink = | author2 = | title = How to Handle Pressure | publisher = Tyndale | year = 1975 | location = | pages = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0-8423-1513-6 }} 4. ^{{Cite web| last =| first =| authorlink =| author2 =| title =NCF Leadership personnel| work =| publisher =| date =| url =http://www.ncfliving.org/about_personnel.php| format =| doi =| accessdate =February 3, 2011| deadurl =yes| archiveurl =https://web.archive.org/web/20070319034623/http://www.ncfliving.org/about_personnel.php| archivedate =March 19, 2007| df =mdy-all}} 5. ^{{Cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | author2 = | title = The Storm That Kept Them Safe | work = | publisher = | date = | url = http://www.touchlife.org/library_default_new1.asp?searchoption=keywords&title=Y&group=&article_id=1155&ar_author=&ar_orgpub=&ar_title=The%20Storm%20That%20Kept%20Them%20Safe&searchstring1=&searchstring2=&searchstring3=&mark=8&keyword=%AC%E8%C3%AB&page=1&apage=2&keyword_article=Y| format = | doi = | accessdate = February 3, 2011 }} 6. ^{{Cite book | last = Pollock | first = John Charles | authorlink = | author2 = | title = A Foreign Devil in China: The Story of Dr. L. Nelson Bell | publisher = World Wide Publications | date = | location = | pages = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0-89066-141-3 }} 7. ^{{Cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | author2 = | title = Freiman Stoltzfus – Biography | work = | publisher = | date = | url = http://www.freimanstoltzfus.com/biography/?PHPSESSID=8d201eb0db16dce5b5489c4115ec97ce | format = | doi = | accessdate = February 3, 2011 }} External links
9 : 1923 births|2010 deaths|American magazine editors|American women poets|American women journalists|20th-century American poets|20th-century American women writers|20th-century American non-fiction writers|Women magazine editors |
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