Quinton Rutledge was in my 5th grade class at
Eastern Elementary School in Scott County, KY. Miss Carpenter was our teacher. I
recollect that Quinton was slender and had brown wavy hair. He sat parallel to
me in the row to my left. I remember him as being a quite person. I don’t
recall him complaining about not feeling well. But one day he went home from
school and had an appendicitis attack. They took him to the hospital but his appendix
had ruptured and he died. He left school one day and the next morning we got the
news that he was dead. You don’t get much school work accomplished after giving
or receiving that kind of news. Quinton’s mother was the secretary at our
school. So she had to come to work at the school where her son was supposed to
be and watch the activity of other children and then go home without her son.
Quinton’s father was a farmer. He had to work the fields around their farmstead
with the constant reminder of the emptiness left by his absence. The school bus
I rode went by the white two-story weather boarded house where Quinton
lived. Every day I would look at that
house and sense the sadness and pain that surely dwelled within those walls. I
listened to my own mother express sorrow for the family. Mother always
shuddered when a family lost a child the same age as one of her own. That has
been 48 years ago. But that is the kind of thing one does not easily forget.
There is a lot of pain and suffering in the world. I have
been right in the middle of a lot of it. The longer I live and the more I see
and the longer I reflect the more I am determined not to be involved in fussing
about small things. There are too many important things and hurtful things that
need my attention and emotion. I cannot solve all or even most of the problems
I encounter. But I can soothe them. I can share the truth of God and exercise the
love of God and pray for the power of God. And my feeble lips can deliver a
word from God in the hope and belief that it will bring hope and comfort to
tortured souls. Life is too short and often too tragic to do otherwise.
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