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Step Singing

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Harpeth Hall’s Lady of the Hall reflects “As much as we celebrate our ultimate on the lives grown ‘From Blossoms’ graduation from this place, there is a lot of work that we and the people around us put by Jessica Bliss in to get to that point,” she said. “That’s what makes Harpeth Hall special. There is a poemby Li-Young Lee about peaches bought from a boy “We have a community of teachers, classmates, parents, and friends pour into at the bend of a road. us. They give us room to grow, to laugh at In the poem, the writer contemplates ourselves, to celebrate each other well, and the beginnings of the sweet fruit and their care is the reason we are ready to go out how, as it is nurtured from blossoms, into this world as young adults — because it its growth reflects the joy, beauty, and wouldn’t do to stay in this orchard. We are love that we carry through life. ripe for reaping, for taking the goodness we When Betsy Rogers ’22 read the piece have felt here out into the world, because in AP Literature class, she understood the world needs a lot of goodness.” that its message was meant for her and her classmates. As she stood In May, as part of the annual Step Singing tradition, Harpeth Hall’s in front of those gathered on Souby Lawn — a crown of blossoms seniors celebrated and shared that goodness with the classes that around her own head as this year’s Lady of the Hall — she shared will now come after them. A special ceremony that has endured how she felt the poem reflected the journey of the Class of 2022. since the 1920s, each year, Harpeth Hall’s graduating class passes

leadership of the school to the juniors. The ceremony also honors the Lady of the Hall, the highest honor given to a member of the senior class.

As Betsy reflected on the days of precious joys, necessary life lessons, passionate teachers, and sweet, beautiful friends at Harpeth Hall, she asked those around her to do the same.

“Imagine that orchard within you,” she said. “Think of all the memories you have gathered from this beloved campus. The loving hands squeezes in the halls. The day the math lightbulb finally went off. The many frolics on Souby Lawn. The countless tears shed during assemblies — mostly by me. Consider these things and know we are lucky to have such rich orchards planted by Harpeth Hall.” After Betsy spoke, her classmates joined her on the steps of the Ann Scott Carell Library to carry on a tradition started by the women of Ward-Belmont nearly a century ago. The Class of 2022 passed on its leadership of Harpeth Hall to the Class of 2023 by singing “Nobody Knows” by the Lumineers. Class President Kendall Burch announced that the seniors would be donating the remainder of their class funds to the Olivia Fund — which helps students and families at Harpeth Hall with expenses that are important to an inclusive school experience but are not covered in financial aid.

The juniors accepted the leadership of the school with their own song to the seniors, “I’ll Always Remember You” by Hannah Montana. Then the Class of 2023 pledged to transmit Harpeth Hall better, greater,

Lady of the Hall and the 2022 Court

Lady of the Hall Elizabeth Evelyn Rogers Senior Representative Cori Reese Magsby Junior Representative Grace Lauren Moore Sophomore Representative Anne Mason Hart Freshman Representative Tara Elizabeth Hagerty Eighth Grade Herald Madison Lucille Camp Seventh Grade Herald Ruby Mae Russell Sixth Grade Crownbearer Georgia Lynn Wolter Fifth Grade Crownbearer Ilsa Grey Christopher Flower Girls Charlotte Elizabeth Fayard and Sophie Elizabeth Jacques

and more beautiful than it was transmitted to them.

To close the ceremony, MarQuis Chappell, an English teacher and Harpeth Hall’s director of equity and inclusion, spoke about the opportunities that each class holds in its hands shaped by three elements of personal agency — truth, legacy, and listening. “Contrary to what you see online, you do shape how others experience you,” he said. “. . . It doesn’t matter how fabulous you are or how fabulous you think you are. If you don’t know how to treat people, no one cares. How you show up in the world matters. The things you say about yourself and others matter — publicly and privately.” Mr. Chappell's speech, in many ways, paid homage to the women writers and scholars who shaped him. As he uplifted those voices, he called on the words of author Toni Morrison, who said that the most lasting thing anyone will ever have is their legacy. “Ask yourself,” Mr. Chappell said, “what will it be?” “Choose this day,” he said, “whether you will be regarded as an agent of honesty, unity, and hope, or as an agent of discord, ruthlessness, and self-preservation.” In making that choice, Mr. Chappell asked the students to consider one more thing — the leadership that comes through listening. “Do better than all the adults, myself included, have done,” he said. “Before responding, posting, asking, telling, agreeing, leading, following, TikToking, Snapchatting, pause and listen to those around you — but most importantly, listen to yourself. Listen to what comes up for you, and then move forward. “The world doesn’t need more leaders who are loud, or popular, or charismatic, or good at small talk, or radical, or strategic. We need more leaders who understand the value of pausing.” On Sunday night, Harpeth Hall paused for a moment on Souby Lawn. Together, students, families, and friends listened. And through that act, they blossomed a little brighter together.

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