More or less, the musings of a graduate of a Scottish university, born in New York, formerly resident in South Africa, and now living in London.
@cusackandrew: Visited Erskine Childers' old regiment in London tonight. His name on the Boer War roll of honour was pointed out with ironic pride.

Massachusetts Bay Tercentenary

For Irish Elk.

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6 Comments so far
  1. 14 September 2007
    10:01 am

    Ah, for Irish Elk? And what about me? I was actually there in 1630…

    Mrs. Peperium
  2. 14 September 2007
    11:04 am

    New Mexico predates Massachusetts by 32 years (1598). “No one expects the Spanish Inquisition!”

  3. 14 September 2007
    11:23 am

    Outstanding! I Enjoy! ye post. Much appreciated!

    MCNS
  4. 14 September 2007
    12:09 pm

    The Clarks arrived with the Winthrop fleet around 1630, along with the Strongs, the Cookes, the Clapps, the Allyns, and so many more of those stout Puritan families which gave America its precious insistance upon personal liberty.
    Equality, of course, played no part in their thinking, implacable enemy of freedom that it is. Woe to us if we cease to follow their wise example.

    L Gaylord Clark
  5. 14 September 2007
    12:20 pm

    A lovely illustration, Andrew. Thanks for posting it.
    Anyone catch the glaring historical inaccuracy? Take another look. Yes, a couple of people in the crowd appear to be enjoying themselves. I supposed the artist received a grilling over that particular mistake.
    Also, 1630? I hate to take anything away from our own codfish aristocrat, Mrs. Peperium, but Nouvelle France had been established for decades before “les Bostonais” arrived looking for the freedom to prey upon their neighbors.

    Old Dominion Tory
  6. 10 October 2007
    12:00 pm

    Oh, Tory, you are unfair to the Puritans. For a different perspective, I recommend J.I. Packer (sometimes called the Last Puritan). Packer writes: “I maintain that the delights of work and leisure, of friendship and family, of eating and mating, of arts and crafts, of playing and watching games, of finding out and making things, of helping other people, and all the other noble pleasures that life affords, are doubled for the Christian; for, as the cheerful old Puritans used to say (no, sir, that is not a misprint, nor a Freudian lapse; I mean Puritans – the real, historical Puritans, as distinct from the smug sourpusses of last-century Anglo-American imagination), the Christian tastes God in all his or her pleasures, and this increases them, whereas for other people pleasure brings with it a sense of hollowness which reduces it.”

    ScurvyOaks
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