Memories of Master Eadweard Boicewright

Nearly a month ago, my lord husband told me that Master Eadweard Boicewright, one of my dearest mentors and friends, had passed away. He said that he had suffered a cardiac event.

It broke my heart.

Papa, as those who learned from him call him, was a pillar, not just in our kingdom, but in the Society at large. He was a keeper of our memories, he dispensed wisdom to kings and peasants, and he gave of himself whenever and where ever he saw a need, without any expectation of praise or reward.

The first time we met was at Valor, in 2011. I was mending a friend’s trousers when he sat down across from me at the table. We talked about my SCA name, about trouser seam stability (he told me how his trousers were split when he was called into court to receive a Calon Cross), and mundane things. In retrospect, I see now how he was sizing me up and getting a feel for the kind of person I am.

I guess he liked what he saw because a few months later, he sponsored me in my first Queen’s Prize Tournament and introduced me to Marcella (Mama), his lady wife. She taught me how to make cloth buttons, finger loop braid, lucet, and heddle weave.  It became a habit during my first year in the SCA: I’d go hang out in Papa’s wood wright shop and make tools then go upstairs and ask Mama to teach me how to use them.

Since I moved away, I’ve missed that bond and rapport. Not many people will drive twenty-thirty minutes to take a broke college student out for a nice lunch because she spent the bulk of her much-need Spring break bedridden with Strep Throat, but Papa did. Not many laurels would steer apprentices that could be stars in their belts toward other peers because they see how they could flourish in that relationship, but Papa did.

To be clear, Papa was not the sort of man who brandished his title. I still remember the grin that spread across his face when he finally told me he was a laurel and saw my face pale as I shrunk away a little. I was still new enough to have Peer Fear and had been talking easily  with him for over an hour at that point, so I was a more than a little intimidated. More importantly, though, what he said to me about being a laurel gave me the first inkling that it was something I could aspire towards. He told me that being a laurel meant being a teacher and teaching is something to which I have always been drawn. That seed has remained with me eight years later.

Papa was also one of the most insightful people I have ever known and the most honest. He was the man he always aspired to be, like the Kipling poem he was fond of quoting: a man who talked with crowds without losing his virtue and walked with kings without losing the common touch. I wasn’t done learning from him and I’ll always miss our talks.

Laurel “Scroll” for Cathus the Curious

Laurel Scroll for Master Cathus the Curious

Text by Mistress Aidan Cocrinn, Candle Stand by Dammo Uttweiler, Calligraphy and Illumination by Mistress Luckie Galsbrenner

 

cathus-laurel-scroll-and-candle-stand-qpt-sept-2016

Candle stand/scroll for Cathus the Curious

 

Main Laurel Scroll for Cathus the Curious

Main Laurel Scroll for Cathus the Curious

 

Text:

Behold now ye the chandler ever toiling

Making his lights for others own workings

 

Now see the dancer, lightly his treading

Spinning, weaving, joyous in his laughing

 

He is music maker, knowledge giver

Thus is Cathus, curious and clever

 

Lead Falcon college by BelAnna’s word

Rebirth the learning, RUSH too long deferred

 

These things are worthy, honorable, just

Laurel honor and peerage certain must

 

Logan and Ylva, Crowns of Calontir

Raise Cathus the Curious to a Peer

 

Know all those who read this, henceforth all know

From today ever forward We do bestow

 

Cathus his Laurel by Our Hand is done

17 September in Year Fifty-One.

Laurel Scroll and Cup for Marius Lucian Fidelis

Laurel Scroll and Cup for His Excellency Marius Lucian Fidelis

Text by Master Sir Angus of Blackmoor, Translation to Latin by Grumio Dixon, Calligraphy and Illumination by Mistress Mirabel Wynne

Cup by Mistress Katherine von Helige

 

 

Writ by Mistress Mirabel

Laurel Scroll and Cup for Marius Lucian Fidelis

 

Proconsul Marius Lucianus Fidelis Artifex
Invited into
Order of the Laurel
On the ides of September
From the hands of Duncan Bruce, Rex Calontirii
and Ilva, Regina Calontirii

and the Latin translation he had done by Grumio:

LVCIAN ESSE LAVRIA
INVITATVS EST
ID.SEPT.A

LOGAN ET ILVA
REGE ET REGINA
CALONTIRII

Cup created by Mistress Katherine de Helige

Cup created by Mistress Katherine von Helige, photos courtesy of Mistress Katherine

lucian-cup