Received: from [5.39.221.95] (port=35205 helo=itsaboomshot.com) by stodi.digitalkingdom.org with esmtp (Exim 4.87) (envelope-from ) id 1c5KJr-0002Ux-OS for lojban@lojban.org; Fri, 11 Nov 2016 14:29:15 -0800 Date: Fri, 11 Nov 2016 15:46:06 -0700 Message-ID: Mime-Version: 1 To: Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit From: "Myra Adkins" Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii Subject: This is the coolest-gadget I have ever seen: #17530171 X-Spam-Score: 4.4 (++++) X-Spam_score: 4.4 X-Spam_score_int: 44 X-Spam_bar: ++++ X-Spam-Report: Spam detection software, running on the system "stodi.digitalkingdom.org", has NOT identified this incoming email as spam. The original message has been attached to this so you can view it or label similar future email. If you have any questions, see the administrator of that system for details. Content preview: Sling-Specials would do, and what they would not do, if they drew the first prize. Samuel Cutts and Sybil Cutts themselves had got drawn into the inter est of the ren, and many was the night when they had sat up, without any light but that of a pinetorch, planning out the details of the little colony they would form at the East ward, if if only one of the ten great prizes should, by any marvel, fall to him. And now Tripps Cove which, perhaps, he had thought of as much as he had thought of any of the ten had fallen to him. This was the reason why he showed so much emotion, and why he could hardly speak, when he read the numbers. It was because that had come to him which repre sented so completely what he wanted, and yet which he had not even dared to pray for. It was so much more than he expected, it was the dream of years, indeed, made true. ? For Samuel Cutts had proved to himself that he was a good leader of men. He knew he was, and many men knew it who had followed him under Carolina suns, and in the snows of Valley Forge. Samuel Cutts knew, equally well, that he was not a good maker of money, nor creator of pork and potatoes. Six years of farming in 8 THEY SAW A GREAT LIGHT. the valley of the Merrimac had proved that to him, if he had never learned it before. Samuel Cuttss dream had been, when he went away to explore the Western Reserve, that he would like to bring together some of the best line of&cers and some of the best privates of the old Fighting Twentyseventh, and take them, with his old provident skill, which had served them so well upon so many campinggrounds, to some re gion where they could stand by each other again, as they had stood by each other before, and where sky and earth would yield them more than sky and earth have yet yielded any man in Eastern Massachusetts. Well as I said, the Western Reserve did not seem to be the place. After all, the Fighting Twentyseventh were not skilled in the tilling of the land. They furnished their quota when the boats were to be drawn through the ice of the Delaware, to [...] Content analysis details: (4.4 points, 5.0 required) pts rule name description ---- ---------------------- -------------------------------------------------- 0.0 URIBL_BLOCKED ADMINISTRATOR NOTICE: The query to URIBL was blocked. See http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/DnsBlocklists#dnsbl-block for more information. [URIs: itsaboomshot.com] 1.4 RCVD_IN_BRBL_LASTEXT RBL: No description available. [5.39.221.95 listed in bb.barracudacentral.org] -0.0 SPF_PASS SPF: sender matches SPF record -0.0 SPF_HELO_PASS SPF: HELO matches SPF record -1.9 BAYES_00 BODY: Bayes spam probability is 0 to 1% [score: 0.0000] 0.7 MIME_HTML_ONLY BODY: Message only has text/html MIME parts 0.0 HTML_MESSAGE BODY: HTML included in message 0.0 HTML_FONT_LOW_CONTRAST BODY: HTML font color similar or identical to background 0.9 RAZOR2_CHECK Listed in Razor2 (http://razor.sf.net/) 0.5 RAZOR2_CF_RANGE_51_100 Razor2 gives confidence level above 50% [cf: 100] 1.9 RAZOR2_CF_RANGE_E8_51_100 Razor2 gives engine 8 confidence level above 50% [cf: 100] 0.8 RDNS_NONE Delivered to internal network by a host with no rDNS 0.0 T_REMOTE_IMAGE Message contains an external image Sling-Specials
would do, and what they would not do, if they drew the first prize. Samuel Cutts and Sybil Cutts themselves had got drawn into the inter est of the ren, and many was the night when they had sat up, without any light but that of a pinetorch, planning out the details of the little colony they would form at the East ward, if if only one of the ten great prizes should, by any marvel, fall to him. And now Tripps Cove which, perhaps, he had thought of as much as he had thought of any of the ten had fallen to him. This was the reason why he showed so much emotion, and why he could hardly speak, when he read the numbers. It was because that had come to him which repre sented so completely what he wanted, and yet which he had not even dared to pray for. It was so much more than he expected, it was the dream of years, indeed, made true. ? For Samuel Cutts had proved to himself that he was a good leader of men. He knew he was, and many men knew it who had followed him under Carolina suns, and in the snows of Valley Forge. Samuel Cutts knew, equally well, that he was not a good maker of money, nor creator of pork and potatoes. Six years of farming in 8 THEY SAW A GREAT LIGHT. the valley of the Merrimac had proved that to him, if he had never learned it before. Samuel Cuttss dream had been, when he went away to explore the Western Reserve, that he would like to bring together some of the best line of&cers and some of the best privates of the old Fighting Twentyseventh, and take them, with his old provident skill, which had served them so well upon so many campinggrounds, to some re gion where they could stand by each other again, as they had stood by each other before, and where sky and earth would yield them more than sky and earth have yet yielded any man in Eastern Massachusetts. Well as I said, the Western Reserve did not seem to be the place. After all, the Fighting Twentyseventh were not skilled in the tilling of the land. They furnished their quota when the boats were to be drawn through the ice of the Delaware, to assist in Rahls Christ mas party at Trenton. Many was the embarka tion at the head of Elk, in which the Fight ing Twentyseventh had provided half the seamen for the transport. It was the Fighting Twentvseventh who cut out the Princess Charlotte cutter in Edisto Bay. But the Fighting Twentyseventh had never, so far as

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But when I came again, said Santa Claus For this was a lottery in which there were no blanks. The old Commonwealth of Massachu THEY SAW A GREAT LIGHT. 3 Samuel Cutts was too old a man, and had already tested too critically his own powers in what the world calls business, by a sad satire, 4 THEY SAW A GREAT LIGHT. THEY SAW A GREAT LIGHT. 7 THEY SAW A GREAT LIGHT. 9 any one knew, beaten one sword into one plough share, nor one spear into one pruninghook. But Tripps Cove seemed to offer a different prospect. Why not, with a dozen or two of the old set, establish there, not the New Jerusalem, indeed, but something a little more elastic, a little more helpful, a little more alive, than these kilndried, sundried, and timedried old towns of the seaboard of Massachusetts A. T any rate, they could live together in Tripps Cove, as they wintered together at Valley Forge, at Bennetts Hollow, by the Green Licks, and in the Lykens Intervale. This was the question which Samuel Cutts wanted to solve, and which the fatal figures 2197 put him in the way of solving. Tripps Cove is our Christmas present, said Sybil Cutts to her husband, as they went to bed. But so far removed were the habits of New England then from the observance of ecclesias tical anniversaries, that no one else had remem bered that day that it was Christmas which was passing. 10 THEY SAW A GEEAT LIGHT. CHAPTER II. TRIPPS COVE. Call this a long preface, if you please, but it seems to me best to tell this story so that I may explain what manner of people those were and are who lived, live, and will live, at Tripps Cove, and why they have been, are, and will be linked together, with a sort of family tie and relationship which one does not often see in the villages selfformed or formed at haphazard on the seaside, on the hillside, or in the prairies of America. Tripps Cove never became the Great Mercantile City of the Future, nor do I believe it ever will. But there Samuel Cutts lived in a happy life for fifty years, and there he died, honored, blessed, and loved. By and by there came the second war with England, the Endymion came cruising along upon the coast, and picking up the fishingboats and the coasters, burning the ships on the stocks, or compelling the owners to ransom them. Old General Cutts was seventy years old then ; but he was, as he had always been, the head of the settlement at Tripps, and there was no lack of men younger THEY SAW A GREAT LIGHT. 11 tlian he, the sergeants or the highprivates of the Fighting Twentyseventh, who drilled the s of the village for whatever service might impend. When the s went down to Run kins and sent the Endymions boats back to her with half their crews dead or dying,
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faster than they came, old General Cutts was with them, and took sight on his rifle as quickly and as bravely as the best of them. And so twenty years more passed on, and, when he was well nigh ninety, the dear old man died full of years and full of blessings, all because he had launched out for himself, left the life he was not fit for, and undertaken life in which he was at home. Yes and because of this also, when 1861 came with its terrible alarm to the whole coun try, and its call to duty, all Tripps Cove was all right. The girls were eager for service, and the s were eager for service. The girls stood by the s, and the s stood by the girls. The husbands stood by the wives, and the wives stood by the husbands. I do not mean that there was not many another community in which everybody was steadfast and true. But I do mean that here was one great family, although the census rated it as fiveandtwenty families, 12 THEY SAW A GEE AT LIGHT. which, had one heart and one soul in the con test, and which went into it with one heart and one soul, every man and every woman of them all bearing each others burdens. Little Sim Cutts, who broke the silence that night when the postman threw down the Bos ton Gazette, was an old man of eightyfive when they all got the news of the shots at Fort Sumter. The old man was as hale and hearty as are half the men of sixty in this land today. With all his heart he encouraged the s who volunteered in answer to the first call for regi ments from Maine. Then with full rehance on the traditions of the Fighting Twenty seventh, he explained to the fishermen and the coasters that Uncle Abraham would need them for his webfooted service, as well as for his leoions on the land. And thev found out their ways to Portsmouth and to Charlestown, so that they might enter the navy as their brothers entered the army. And so it was, that, when Christmas came in 1861, there was at Tripps Cove only one of that noble set of young fellows, who but a vear before was haulino hemlock and spruce and fir and pine at Christmas at the girls order, and worked in the meetinghouse for THEY SAW A GREAT LIGHT. 13 two days as the girls bade them work, so that when Parson Spaulding came in to preach his Christmas sermon, he thought the house was a bit of the woods themselves.