Concord Museum
Concord Museum
  • Видео 177
  • Просмотров 98 707
Paul Revere's Ride Program at the Concord Museum 2023
Paul Revere's Ride Program at the Concord Museum 2023
Просмотров: 146

Видео

A Revolution in Women's Athletics
Просмотров 81Год назад
A Revolution in Women's Athletics
Ellen Garrison: The Choice to March
Просмотров 205Год назад
Ellen Garrison: The Choice to March
Ellen Garrison: Antislavery Activist
Просмотров 166Год назад
Ellen Garrison: Antislavery Activist
Gaining Ground
Просмотров 1542 года назад
Gaining Ground
Harlem Lacrosse on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Просмотров 1722 года назад
Harlem Lacrosse on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day
The Robbins House on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Просмотров 1862 года назад
The Robbins House on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Civil Disobedience
Просмотров 2482 года назад
Civil Disobedience
The Paul Revere's Ride Program at the Concord Museum 2021
Просмотров 1173 года назад
The Paul Revere's Ride Program at the Concord Museum 2021
Highlights from the Decorative Arts Sampler: Textiles
Просмотров 383 года назад
Highlights from the Decorative Arts Sampler: Textiles
Highlights from the Decorative Arts Sampler: Works on Paper
Просмотров 153 года назад
Highlights from the Decorative Arts Sampler: Works on Paper
Thoreau Immersive
Просмотров 843 года назад
Thoreau Immersive
Sophia Peabody Before Concord
Просмотров 1833 года назад
Sophia Peabody Before Concord
Louisa May Alcott and the Right to Vote
Просмотров 1053 года назад
Louisa May Alcott and the Right to Vote
Highlights from the Decorative Arts Sampler: Metalworks
Просмотров 83 года назад
Highlights from the Decorative Arts Sampler: Metalworks
Decorative Arts Sampler: Metalwork
Просмотров 153 года назад
Decorative Arts Sampler: Metalwork
Highlights from the Decorative Arts Sampler: Furniture
Просмотров 223 года назад
Highlights from the Decorative Arts Sampler: Furniture
Highlights from the Decorative Arts Sampler: Ceramics
Просмотров 263 года назад
Highlights from the Decorative Arts Sampler: Ceramics
Stitching Concord’s History
Просмотров 1693 года назад
Stitching Concord’s History
The Center of Antislavery
Просмотров 873 года назад
The Center of Antislavery
On the Move
Просмотров 1063 года назад
On the Move
Welcome to Every Path Laid Open
Просмотров 2083 года назад
Welcome to Every Path Laid Open
Bridge to the Future: Leadership Breakfast
Просмотров 223 года назад
Bridge to the Future: Leadership Breakfast
7:30 a.m. The Regulars Enter Concord
Просмотров 423 года назад
7:30 a.m. The Regulars Enter Concord
10:15 a.m. Retreat from the North Bridge
Просмотров 393 года назад
10:15 a.m. Retreat from the North Bridge
9:00 a.m. Change Your Flints
Просмотров 423 года назад
9:00 a.m. Change Your Flints
10:30 p.m. Light the Lanterns
Просмотров 443 года назад
10:30 p.m. Light the Lanterns
A Concord Love Story: Nathaniel Hawthorne and Sophia Peabody
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.3 года назад
A Concord Love Story: Nathaniel Hawthorne and Sophia Peabody
Concord Cooks: Valentines Day Gnocchi with Saltbox Kitchen
Просмотров 3953 года назад
Concord Cooks: Valentines Day Gnocchi with Saltbox Kitchen
Excerpt from "A Conversation on Loring Coleman and the New England Landscape"
Просмотров 1953 года назад
Excerpt from "A Conversation on Loring Coleman and the New England Landscape"

Комментарии

  • @Aly_Co_Art702
    @Aly_Co_Art702 25 дней назад

    Putnam, as in the Salem Witch Trials Putnam?

  • @davicool4284
    @davicool4284 Месяц назад

    Thank - You for helping us remember our American heroes ❤

  • @buckchesterfield8886
    @buckchesterfield8886 3 месяца назад

    Really cool, thanks!

  • @Hyatt-n8k
    @Hyatt-n8k 7 месяцев назад

    Fascinating debate. Among every great family there will be a seldom chance of possibly having heard of someone who has received the greatest of levels within recognition, inwards with accomplishments. It is only just now that I find the explanation further. A special thank you to the interviewer. To Aunt Sue and Uncle Doug, possible fund raiser plus tons of important people such as yourselves for really cool PR stuff. I asked the Kerry’s and Nikki and Clinton’s if they wanted to consider going. A few olympians etc. I don’t know if Barack and Michelle have any interest. Bode will probably be going. A bunch of my known friends wanna meet you both. Kerry’s given Bob etc. badass interview. It was fun.

  • @seascape35
    @seascape35 9 месяцев назад

    So, where is Waldo?

  • @voyaristika5673
    @voyaristika5673 9 месяцев назад

    What a lovely synopsis of their story. Just what I was looking for. Thank you!

  • @tjprice587
    @tjprice587 Год назад

    I've been in the museum as these kids are going through. Not only are they little learning machines absorbing a ton of info, they are SO enjoying themselves! The education staff is excellent, it's a joy to observe.

  • @mazenblu0
    @mazenblu0 Год назад

    I've viewed several of Dr. Greenidge's presentations here on RUclips. She is so impressive in how well she brings Trotter, the Grimkes, and the exhaustive marathon on Lincoln to life and currency with her very detailed and intimate chronologies. There are these periods of the pre-Civil War, the Reconstruction, the Disenfranchisement, and the Great Depression that cries for a voice like Dr. Greenidge. I believe that should she consider it, her take of how African Americans emerge into their activism of the 1960's from heroes like the Grimkes and Trotter to Dr. King and Malcolm X would be enlightening. I may wonder how she would explain the transformations and debates within America from the lynchings and voter suppressions of the early twentieth century to electing a black president and then a Donald Trump here in the twenty-first century. Whatever she does will be well worth the wait.

  • @anastasiagyulnazaryan783
    @anastasiagyulnazaryan783 Год назад

    I love this video! Deserves more views

  • @karinlarsen4251
    @karinlarsen4251 2 года назад

    All she could carry - One day Humanity will understand. The power of love is the only reason any of us have survived. Why must you persist in focusing on skin color? The crimes you've described have been inflicted on every color / generation. We can't celebrate the end of slavery till the children trapped in sex trafficking are set free. It's getting to be a bigger industry today. Why not dig down to find champions who are the reason you are alive instead of whine about what was made illegal 150 years ago? We all agree it was inhumane. It happened to my people too, Let It Go - look forward. Right about how we can make tomorrow better

  • @jt2465
    @jt2465 2 года назад

    Thanks for taking the time to create content like this. You have certainly left a mark in me through your work.

  • @Tonishog
    @Tonishog 2 года назад

    You make a mistake to keep referring to them as American as there was no America. They were British but on the other side of the conflict and 13 different colonies.

  • @kylekirchhevel9097
    @kylekirchhevel9097 2 года назад

    I swear if he'd wanted to Charlie Gibson could have been a comedian. People don't realize how funny he is. An hour of Charlie and Tim Johnson too is gold.

  • @kath4760
    @kath4760 2 года назад

    Terrific conversation. Lots of great stories and some particularly insightful comments about current news and how to find the truth these days.

  • @ladybiz6682
    @ladybiz6682 2 года назад

    The discussion was well received and enjoyed. I'm in the process of reading the book. The school named after him in Roxbury, MA has a beautiful picture of him at the entrance. He was an amazing man ! Thanks so much for sharing ! : )

  • @AurelioCortez
    @AurelioCortez 2 года назад

    itinerant historians are my favorite kind of historians... Michael Medved, too

  • @BUKCOLLECTOR
    @BUKCOLLECTOR 2 года назад

    Brief Bio: I’m Al Fogel born in 1945 and at an early age began writing poems. In 1962 I was introduced to a neighbor who just returned from Avatar Meher Baba’s “ East west” gathering and handed me a book titled “The Everything and the Nothing” that included brief but powerful passages by Meher Baba that touched me deeply and i became a “ Baba Lover” In 2010 while on Jane Reichhold’s AHA website workshopping poems I befriended a Chinese man who helped me perfect my Senryu and Haibun. I am now considered one of the nations leading authorities on Tanka , Senryu, and Haibun. Here are some examples of each of my specialties. They are all from the contemporary American format. Senryu ( senryu is the humorous human side of haiku. Usually 3 lines but can be 2 or 1 line so long as it is 17 syllables or less). It is considered the humorous human side of haiku. For example, the following two of mine are horrific and heartbreaking dealing with the Holocaust): cattle cars - between the slats human eyes ~ Stutthof - the stench of burnt smoke from the chimneys (And here are some more examples): thrift store purchase inside the leather jacket a tarnished half-heart ~ dentist chair the hygienist removes my Bluetooth ~ Internet argument all his words in CAPS hers in EMOTICONS ~ personal trainer I grunt sweat strain and HE gets paid ~ after the divorce he spends more time at the dollar store ~ damsel in distress Clarke Kent still searching for a phone booth ~ cauliflower ears once a contender now boxing vegetables ~ under the influence - moonshine ~ Audubon sale all variety of seeds. . . early birds welcome ~ Buddhist fortune cookie the unfolded paper reads “ better luck next birth!” ~ sudden downpour. . . adults run for shelter ~ sidewalk cafe birds and people tweeting ~ Crowded crosswalk the “seeing eye” dog leads the way ~ deserted train depot a long line of tracks leading nowhere ~~ return to my youth lit by the tracks of Lionel trains. ~ Tanka: (Tanka is comprised of 5 lines of 31 syllables or less. Usually there are far less syllables) Here are 3 examples: returning home from a Jackson pollock exhibition I smear my face with paint and morph into art ~ crowded bus a young lady offers me her seat it seems like only yesterday I was offering mine ~ deserted train depot a conductor shouting “ All Aboard!” now a long line of tracks leading nowhere ~ Haibun: ( the haibun consists of a prose section with one or more haiku that must in some way relate to the prose. All Haibun have titles Here are some examples: The Mathematics of Retribution “Karma is unfathomable,” I inform her It’s late and our conversation turns heavy “ Seems simple to me, “my girlfriend responds. “If I murder you, then it’s reasonable that I will be murdered in this or another life to balance the ledger.” “ Not necessarily so” I’m quick to rejoin. “What if you murdered me in this life because I murdered you in a prior life karmic debts and dues are now equalized.” “But what if I get caught and I go to jail for life. Where’s the equal payback in that?” “As I said, karma is unfathomable.” We continue discussing reincarnation and then add the possibilities of “group karma” to the mix Finally, at about midnight, we fall asleep Stutthof - the stench of burnt hair from the chimneys ~~ Mama There were days when I pretended to be too sick to go to school - - just for mamas loving embrace -her arms the heat of home Even with the onset of dementia, her cheerfulness was so contagious it was a joy being around her despite the illness. She made everyone laugh with her spontaneous unpredictable behavior. nursing home bumper wheelchair her favorite pastime Once a week I would whisk her away from the assisted-living facility and we would spend several hours together -grabbing a meal or frequenting some of her favorite second-hand stores where she loved to shop and donate clothes. When we drove to her favorite thrift in November, her dementia worsened. thrift store the dress mama donated she wants to buy On a cold December morn mama passed. The funeral was simple. There was a light drizzle as the family gathered at the gravesite. One by one, with eyes full of rain, we said our last goodbyes. autumn twilight - oh mama tuck me under hug me one more time ~ ‘Round Midnight It was a huge ballroom on the top floor of a building on Broadway --an important midtown crossroads in the heart of the Great White Way. My uncle still talks with reverence about how -in his heyday -he would travel by rail to the corner of Lenox and walk inside to the beat of jungle music. Who knew what to expect? One night you might be listening with rapt attention to Theloneous Monk and Dizzy Gillespie the godfathers of bebop in their signature beret caps, or the Nicholas Brothers flashing their wild acrobatic spins and splits, or enchanted by the sweet taste of Brown Sugar -with Bojangles out front. And when the Bird was in flight, even the moon was not high enough. But in 1940 the ballroom closed its doors to make way for a commercial housing development and another kind of night. Harlem The A-train replaced by the Bullet ~ Atlantic City New Jersey I had just graduated from high school I remember stopping for saltwater taffy -as evening journeyed slowly into night. Nearing curfew, we sat on a protruded sandy enclave--holding hands, looking out at the ocean, not saying much. In the distance the lights from an ocean liner flickered as the night kept coming on in... first “french kiss” under the boardwalk “over the moon!” ~~ All love, Al

  • @BUKCOLLECTOR
    @BUKCOLLECTOR 2 года назад

    A quality small press journal that you might consider submitting to is “Rattle” Each issue features a section on prize winning and runner-up poems. I would like to share the following runner-up poem that when I read it, I fell madly in love with it. It was written by Diana Goetsch and published in Rattle’s Issue #32 in 2009. The name of the poem is “Writer In Residence, Central State” After reading it, it has become one of my all-time favorite poems! I’ve read and re-read it numerous times. All my poet friends agree. The journal is still going strong and accepting submissions. If you care to enter a contest, the entry fee is $20 but the prize money is worth taking a chance. I believe in the thousands for the winning poem and hundreds for runner-up. But email the editor for precise details and good luck if someone decides to submit. Here’s the Poem: ~~ WRITER IN RESIDENCE, CENTRAL STATE I’m writing this from nowhere. Oklahoma if you care. It’s not south, not west, not really Midwest. Think of a hairless Chihuahua on the shoulder of Texas, make an X, I’m in the middle, in an apartment above the dumpsters on a parking lot across from a football stadium. The shriveled leaves of what passes for autumn scuttle across the blacktop. Prairie Striders stand under cars saying Hey fuck you to French pluperfects in the pines. I’ve renamed the birds. They don’t seem to mind. In Oklahoma when you say a word like pluperfect, somehow you’re certain no one in the state has used it that day. Sometimes the parking lot feels like a lake, a lake with light towers and cars on top of it. Sometimes I see an Indian burial ground under there. You don’t think of asphalt as earth, but if they paved the entire prairie-which seems to be the plan-it would still curve with the horizon and shine in the sun. And no matter where you are, if you let the world quiet down you’ll start to hear the most terrible things about yourself. But then, like a teenager, it’ll tire of cursing and deliver you into the silence of graves. You’ll look out on the world and see yourself looking out. Now I know when monks retreat to the charnel ground and stay there long enough, the demons tire of shouting. No battles, no spells: you wait for them to cry themselves to sleep. If everyone were healed and well and all neuroses gone, would there be anything left to write about? Maybe just weather and death. I’d like to die on a mountain in winter in New Hampshire, the one the old man climbed, having decided his natural time was done. How alive he must have been during that short series of lasts-last step, last look around, bend of the waist, head on the ground, the soundless closing of his lids. How easy to be in love with the earth, breathing the crystalline air as he shivered and yawned and let the night take him home. Back in New York City there’s a book of Freud high on a shelf that presided over far too much. The past, it kept insisting, the past. There was also a mouse, who came out whenever I was still and quiet for long enough. She’d sniff my foot, go to the floor-length mirror, then drag her long tail into the kitchen. At first I set a trap. Then I knew her to be the secret life of my apartment, witness to everything without comment, her visit my reward for keeping still, for praying in a closet as Jesus advised. Don’t worry, said a woman last winter. I can see you’re worried. She had the wrinkled eyes of an old Cherokee, and spoke of past lives without a trace of contrivance. The silence here on weekends is so total it holds me. Even when the stadium is full, I don’t hear the people, just the PA telling who tackled who-who in Oklahoma was born and raised and fed and coached to deliver a game-saving hit. I don’t know where I will be or what I will do next year, but five miles underground in the womb of the earth there is no money, no lack of money, no decisions about dinner or weekends, friends or enemies, no stacks of unanswered mail. I’m trying to live there, so I can live here. -from Rattle #32, Winter 2009 2009 Poetry Prize Honorable Mention __________ Diana Goetsch: “I’m basically a love poet. I’ve started to understand that after all these years. No matter the subject, I think my mission has something to do with redemption. And I just go for the hardest thing to redeem.”

  • @BUKCOLLECTOR
    @BUKCOLLECTOR 2 года назад

    I hope you don’t mind me sharing the following poem, one of my all time favorite meta poetic poems by a poet named “Howard Dull” titled “Suibhne Gheilt” that I recently chanced upon. When I read it, I became speechless. And most of my poetry friends consider this as one of their all time favorites. It was published in a 1970s anthology titled “ Open Poetry” and proves that once Poetry hits you in your heart, you could be the worst nefarious scoundrel with kings at your bidding and Empires at your command but you will be transformed and never again return to your former Self. ~~ Suibhne Gheilt 1 He has haunted me now for over a year that madman Suibhne Gheilt who in the middle of a battle looked up and saw something that made him leap up and fly over swords and trees - a poet gifted above all others - 11 How could a proud loud mouth who yelled KILL KILL KILL as he plowed done the enemy - heads rolling off of his sword - be so lifted up ( or fly up as those below saw it - wings beating) be so suddenly gifted with poetry and nest so high in Ireland’s tall trees? Is there a point where all paths cross? And why am I so drawn to him that all my questions seem shot in his direction? “And they ran into the woods and threw their lances and shot their arrows up through the branches” What parallels could I ever hope to find - my refusal to fight ( weaseling out on psychiatric grounds)? my leaving my country behind? my poetry? “and my wife wept on the path below. . . Oh memory is sweet but sweeter is the sorrel in the pool in the path below” I fly down every night to eat 111 Sweeney like the rest of us would have been better off if he had never anything to do with women. But the point of it lies hidden in a pool of milk in a pile of shit for you to see when a milkmaid smiles Sweeney like the rest of us flies down and when she pours the milk into the hole her heel made in the cowdung Sweeney like the rest of us kneels down and drinks and dies on the horn the cowherd hid in it. So before you have anything to do with women remember Sweeney the bird of Ireland lying on his back in the middle of that path in the moonlight. 1V And on my way home this morning ( my wife waiting) my shadow racing up the path ahead of me I saw something ( a black stone?) thrown at the back of its head ducked and spun around so fast I almost fell down - it was a bird flying up into a tree V No good could come out of this war out of what burns in the heart of our highly disciplined John Q. Killer as a whole village bursts into one flame - the villagers streaming like tears towards the forest cover his helicopter’s blades blow the leaves off and and the flame towards. . . as we sit in front of our bubbles watching our president ( whose bubbletalk no one can escape and he is a little bit mad -calling the reporters in for an interview while he’s sitting on the bubble having a bubble movement) and first lady climb into their big bubble bed an Lucy, born of their own bubbles, crawls in between - “ Mah daddy has so many troubles turning the world into a bubble and sick of crossfire - the cries of the women and children flying over his head - he stumbled down to the riverbank and found, the wreckage twisted around the tree behind, his skull. . . Noises, there are noises, noises that can of themselves drive a man mad -NOISES! But last night the Stockhausen penetrated from the four sides of the auditorium, stripping each layer of feeling and thought until all that was left was something the size of a nut - so tiny, so hard, so impenetrable it was alone in the middle of an infinite space. . . -Howard Dull ~~ ps: Howard Dull was such an obscure poet that he never published a book and ( to my knowledge) never published another poem. But OMG, this was so brilliant that in my opinion it should be read and studied at the college level. All love in isolation from Miami Beach, Florida, Al

  • @BUKCOLLECTOR
    @BUKCOLLECTOR 2 года назад

    Enjoyed very much your poem and unique cadence and word choices that had an emotional impact and kept me engaged throughout. I, too, am a poet ( I write mostly Japanese format poems i.e. haiku , senryu, tanka/kyoka, haibun etc. I hope you don’t mind me sharing a Tanka and a haiku dedicated to Matshuo Bashō’s frog with added insightful commentary by the late AHA founder and poet Jane Reichhold who considered my haiku among her 10 favorite haiku of all time! What an honor. Here’s the Bashō poem with Jane Reichhold’s insightful commentary: Bashō’s frog four hundred years of ripples At first the idea of picking only 10 of my favorite haiku seemed a rather daunting task. How could I review all the haiku I have read in my life and decide that there were only 10 that were outstanding? Then realized I was already getting a steady stream of excellent haiku day by day through the AHA forum. The puns and write-offs based on Basho's most famous haiku are so numerous I would have said that nothing new could be said with this method, but here Al Fogel proved me wrong. Perhaps part of my delight in this haiku lies in the fact that I agree with him. Here he is saying one thing about realism-ripples are on a pond after a frog jumps in, but because it refers back to Basho and his famous haiku, he is also saying something about the haiku and authors who have followed him. We, and our work, are just ripples while Basho holds the honor of inventing the idea of the sound of a frog leaping is the sound of water As haiku spreads around the world, making ripples in more and larger ponds, its ripples are wider-including us all. But his last word reminds us that we are ripples and our lives ephemeral. It will be the frogs that will remain. ~~ Now the tanka: returning home from a Jackson Pollock exhibition I smear paint on my face and morph into art. ~~

  • @BUKCOLLECTOR
    @BUKCOLLECTOR 2 года назад

    Enjoyed very much your poem and unique cadence and word choices that had an emotional impact and kept me engaged throughout. I, too, am a poet ( I write mostly Japanese format poems i.e. haiku , senryu, tanka/kyoka, haibun etc. I hope you don’t mind me sharing a Tanka and a haiku dedicated to Matshuo Bashō’s frog with added insightful commentary by the late AHA founder and poet Jane Reichhold who considered my haiku among her 10 favorite haiku of all time! What an honor. Here’s the Bashō poem with Jane Reichhold’s insightful commentary: Bashō’s frog four hundred years of ripples At first the idea of picking only 10 of my favorite haiku seemed a rather daunting task. How could I review all the haiku I have read in my life and decide that there were only 10 that were outstanding? Then realized I was already getting a steady stream of excellent haiku day by day through the AHA forum. The puns and write-offs based on Basho's most famous haiku are so numerous I would have said that nothing new could be said with this method, but here Al Fogel proved me wrong. Perhaps part of my delight in this haiku lies in the fact that I agree with him. Here he is saying one thing about realism-ripples are on a pond after a frog jumps in, but because it refers back to Basho and his famous haiku, he is also saying something about the haiku and authors who have followed him. We, and our work, are just ripples while Basho holds the honor of inventing the idea of the sound of a frog leaping is the sound of water As haiku spreads around the world, making ripples in more and larger ponds, its ripples are wider-including us all. But his last word reminds us that we are ripples and our lives ephemeral. It will be the frogs that will remain. ~~ Now the tanka: returning home from a Jackson Pollock exhibition I smear paint on my face and morph into art. ~~

  • @johnrawten197
    @johnrawten197 2 года назад

    We have talked about race every single day since 2015. This country needs a break from this topic. All it does is divide us further.

  • @sheilacoughlin8613
    @sheilacoughlin8613 2 года назад

    What a wonderful opportunity we had via the Concord Museums tasteful programing to hear Randall Kennedy discuss his essays on race, law, history, and culture. One of the most notable facts that I learned is that it was black students at Alabama State College who were protesting against various forms of racial injustice whose voices set the precedent for the legal protection of one's first amendment rights to free speech for all citizens of the United States. What an extraordinary and important feat they achieved for our nation and generations to come.

  • @kathleencomer2299
    @kathleencomer2299 2 года назад

    Thanks for a very interesting and informative program.

  • @stefannagel9109
    @stefannagel9109 2 года назад

    Thank you, Concord Museum, for reprising this fascinating presentation. It is extremely timely at a number of levels. As for the missing genealogical information described by Dr Miles, I wonder whether she has considered approaching Dr Lewis Gates at Harvard (of PBS “Finding Your Roots” series).

  • @thejohnny0018
    @thejohnny0018 2 года назад

    Great video! Very interesting! ❤️

  • @sugarandspiceguitar8397
    @sugarandspiceguitar8397 2 года назад

    This audio is very strange

  • @keilanluke
    @keilanluke 3 года назад

    Fascinating words from Mrs Miller and Mr Bauer!!

  • @aidadalati8582
    @aidadalati8582 3 года назад

    I first knew if your book from Clare Hunter’s book (Threads Of Life) and immediately wanted to read it. I am a clothing designer and study mythology and symbolism in Arab women folk clothing Syria in particular. This is a huge opportunity to educate all contemporary women about the cultural roots and significance of women unwritten but sewn history in pain and joy. Love listening to you and your NPR interview was beautiful

  • @gammaraygun6576
    @gammaraygun6576 3 года назад

    There must be such an amazing presence in his home.

  • @sheilacoughlin8613
    @sheilacoughlin8613 3 года назад

    I love Davids's view about the work the future holds for him. "I am not saying I am going to succeed but I am going to try to do with less. And I am going to make even more of a commitment to turning my thoughts outward toward the natural world, toward the mystery, a mystery that includes the human but is not subsumed by it. I am going to try to slow down my life and slow down time knowing I will fail. I am going to do the work that I love and care about, not merely the work that the world rewards me for. And finally, I am going to try to remember that the work is important for what it is not how the world regards it." I also would like to do the type of work that loves and cares about the natural world that includes but is not subsumed by humans. I am always continuously amazed by the meaningful and valuable inspiration Thoreau's life and work brings forth in others. This is a great example.

  • @TheIrishfitter
    @TheIrishfitter 3 года назад

    Excellent!!!

  • @hleavell1
    @hleavell1 3 года назад

    What a fascinating story! Ms. Blanton presented a well-researched and engaging look into the history of this iconic statue. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us!

  • @karenayers7283
    @karenayers7283 3 года назад

    Perhaps, I should clarify. She could read her script, but was very tentative with spontaneous question

  • @karenayers7283
    @karenayers7283 3 года назад

    Disappointing. This woman doesn't know her subject well. Tom , I like your questions

  • @karenayers7283
    @karenayers7283 3 года назад

    Watched it live. This was the best! Thank you

  • @kulsoomsroya6288
    @kulsoomsroya6288 3 года назад

    It needs to come out of academic contrxt of debate and dis missions but needs to create popularity of the ideology ,vision and political philosophy of the Hon.John F. Kennedy God gifted leader the most popular president of America. It needs to display the main feature of his leadership qualities fomrthestreets to the high profile chambers as its high time to work for high cause and save America by the mediocre's politics whi has destroyed the very character of the nation and image of the country. America needs an astute and insightful leadership of Republicans with required vigore and videlity 💚🍍🍒💦Kulsoom Sroya

  • @wendydiaz476
    @wendydiaz476 3 года назад

    Hate speech? Which one?

  • @haroldingebretsem422
    @haroldingebretsem422 3 года назад

    And to think JFK was a conservative. Who wood not acceptable to today's Democrats.

    • @jeffallcock4561
      @jeffallcock4561 3 года назад

      Not a conservative. He would be accepted by today's Democrats, but never by Republicans.

    • @Rayoscope
      @Rayoscope 3 года назад

      I got some "wood" for ya. On the "conservative" side - ten inches worth. Acceptable?

    • @jeffallcock4561
      @jeffallcock4561 3 года назад

      @@Rayoscope Works for me.

  • @micahtewersofficial
    @micahtewersofficial 3 года назад

    Strangest audio I’ve ever heard in a video.

  • @joancampbell6434
    @joancampbell6434 3 года назад

    How wonderful-Ben makes it look so easy and beautiful!

  • @chrisoliver8892
    @chrisoliver8892 3 года назад

    What a lovely story! Thank you for sharing it.

  • @DonnaMoyBruno
    @DonnaMoyBruno 3 года назад

    I'm a member of the Thursday Garden Club of Sudbury and attended this wonderful event! The paintings and the floral arrangements were spectacular ♡ it was a wonderful way to spend MLK day! Thank you for this opportunity ♡

  • @sdhscrosscountry
    @sdhscrosscountry 3 года назад

    Love this

  • @chrisp1545
    @chrisp1545 4 года назад

    This was wonder! Learned much about Massachusetts role in the Suffragette Movement. Thank you.