As for his writing supplies, students and lay attendants always made sure these were on hand, a common responsibility in the day for anyone looking after their teacher. Stories remain of students sharpening hundreds of pencils at once, so prolific was the author! Ledi Sayadaw frequently spent entire nights writing, with only a small oil lamp by his side. One of his few requests was to not have a a “widow house” lamp, but rather a larger one that would allow him to write more easily for long periods. However, his prodigious output steadily diminished his eyesight, so that by the last years of his life, he was entirely blind.
Now what, one may ask, was a "widow house"? In Ledi’s day, oil lamps were not large, and so had to be powered by repeated pushing and pulling of a stick which would ignite the petrol within the lamp, eventually causing the thick wick in the glass portion of the lamp to be lit. As this was a job done only by men, those women who lived alone (often as widows) had to do so in the dark, giving the lamps its name.
Now what, one may ask, was a "widow house"? In Ledi’s day, oil lamps were not large, and so had to be powered by repeated pushing and pulling of a stick which would ignite the petrol within the lamp, eventually causing the thick wick in the glass portion of the lamp to be lit. As this was a job done only by men, those women who lived alone (often as widows) had to do so in the dark, giving the lamps its name.
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