“She wanted the largeness of the world to help her thought.”
         -- George Eliot, in Felix Holt, The Radical
         When Esther Lyon is struggling to make an important decision and stares  out at the sky and stars for help, it strikes me as exactly the feeling I  often have as I search for help in making the small but special daily  decisions about my English classes. More and more as the years pass, I  see myself as a minuscule ship in an endless ocean called learning and  teaching, with the hesitant captain (me) always on deck calling into the  darkness for assistance. I make dozens of decisions each day as I do my  classroom work, of which a fair share seem to produce suitable results,  but I often have the strong sense of a vast world of ideas out there  that could shine down useful lights on the decision-making process. It’s  like I’m using a teensy flashlight to make my choices, when  all-powerful floodlights are always available. In the novel, George  Eliot captures this feeling so well as Esther searches the heavens for  inspiration. I’ve done something similar as I’ve driven my 40 miles to  and from school each day, seeking ideas for lesson plans in the look of  peaceful fields and in the way leaves (these days) lift and fall in  their easy ways along the roads. As I speed along in my small car, the  wide world seems immeasurable -- without end and uncharted and  chock-full of wisdom. It seems impossible, each morning and evening,  that this boundless universe I’m moving through wouldn’t wish me well  with a few fine ideas for lessons – and, luckily, it sometimes does.  There have been days when a thought threw itself into my car as though  from the distant stretch of trees or the never-stopping sky. On other  days an idea for a lesson seemed to light itself up in the passenger  seat beside me, as if to be sure I would notice. I understand Esther as  she stands at the dark window and waits for help from “the largeness of  the world”, and I also understand her quiet confidence that help will  come. 
 
 
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