Sunday, April 14, 2013

An Historical Ri Walking Tour Rooted in the Apple Tree That Consumed Roger Williams

An Historical Ri Walking Tour Rooted in the Apple Tree That Consumed Roger Williams





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An historical walking tour of cultural and architectural magnitude along benefit road in the capital city of Providence, must first root itself in the seed of Rhode Island's founding by Roger Williams. Radical religious beliefs put this Protestant theologian at odds with the Church of England and also with the flock who boarded the Lyon in December, 1631, and located in Boston of the New World. Roger stirred up a tempest as tumultuous as any storm brewing along the Atlantic by espousing three principles dear to his heart: separatism, free time of religion, and disunion of church and state. Furthermore, his study of the Native Americans caused him to doubt the validity of the King's colonial charters, whereby he wrote a lengthy tract to the Massachusetts governor in 1632, advocating the purchase of land from the Indians.

By 1635, Williams was tried by the normal Court and convicted of sedition and heresy. Ordered to be banished, illness delayed execution of this decree. Nevertheless, he skipped town in 1636, trudging through the deep snow on a 105 mile trek from Salem to the head of Narragansett Bay where he received a hearty welcome by the Wampanoags. Fearing extradition of the expatriate, a band of supporters invited the fugitive to cross the Seekonk River. Roger Williams named this settlement which began with twelve friends, "Providence," whose meaning stemmed from "divine help from God."

Roger Williams served as governor of the colony from 1654 through 1658, and is believed to have died sometime in the middle of January 28 and March 15, 1683 with a burial on his own property. Fifty years later, his house collapsed into the cellar, and the gravesite for such a leading man was forgotten until 1860 when Zachariah Allen sought to search the remains of the first governor. This endeavor bordered on the bizarre: "The root of an apple tree was discovered. This tree had pushed downwards one of its main roots in a sloping direction and nearly level course towards the exact spot that had been occupied by the skull of Roger Williams. There production a turn conforming with its circumference, the root followed the direction of the back bone to the hips, and thence divided into two branches, each one following a leg bone to the heel..." (Report Upon the Burial Place of Roger Williams by Howard M. Chapin; published in Providence, 1918). In the King's English, the apple tree root bore a strong resemblance to the figure of the skeleton belonging to Rhode Island's founding father.

The apple tree root is now regarded as a curio and kept by the Rhode Island Historical society at the John Brown House Museum (52 Power Street, corner of Benefit). Group, school, and special tours are available by appointment. Call (401) 273-7507 for scheduling and inquiring about hours open to the public. As long as you're in the vicinity of the apple tree root that consumed Roger Williams, you should "branch" out to other great historical landmarks of cultural and architectural magnitude within walking distance along benefit road in Providence, the city so lovingly named by its founding father:

The Rhode Island Historical Society: benefit Street, A Mile of History - Ongoing programs, exhibits and opportunities where one can Ant. Eject over three centuries of history while taking in the beautiful surroundings of 18th and 19th century architecture, art installations and sculpture, gardens and riverfront activities, and the vibrant rhythm of the surrounding urban neighborhoods. Normally scheduled walking tours and themed walks are available to conventions and special groups, or with industrialized reservations. (401) 273-7507

The Shunned House (135 benefit Street): The Stephen Harris House built in 1763, was made celebrated by Providence writer H.P. Lovecraft. Population died there in alarmingly great numbers possibly because of the dampness and fungous growth in the cellar, the normal sickish smell, the draughts of the hallways, or the quality of the well and pump water - hence "shunned."

The Rhode Island School of produce Museum (224 benefit Street): Also known as the Risd Museum, Rhode Island's leading museum of fine and ornamental art, houses a variety of 84,000 objects of international significance. It is southeastern New England's only broad art museum and is accredited by the American connection of Museums.

The Providence Athenaeum (251 benefit Street): The fourth oldest library in the United States (1753) - neither a collective library, nor an schoraly library, nor a society center, nor a secret club - it is a exiguous bit of all these things and more. (401) 421-6970

The Nightingale-Brown House (357 benefit Street): The museum collections in the house characterize and link each of the five generations of the Brown family. The butler's pantry contains more than 100 pieces of Canton China, possibly imported to Providence aboard Brown house merchant vessels in the eighteenth century and used by the family. (401) 863-1177

The First Unitarian Church of Providence (1 Benevolent Street, corner of Benefit): The third church and present building, dedicated in 1816, was designed by great local master-builder-architect, John Holden Greene, whose many fine buildings changed the face of Providence during the early nineteenth century. (401) 421 - 7920

An historical walking tour deeply rooted in the apple tree oddity that consumed Rhode Island's founder, Roger Williams, naturally branches to other architectural and cultural landmarks of prominence dotted along benefit road in the capital city of Providence. A Rhode Romp in this vicinity by native Rhode Islanders and out-of-towners constitutes a visual odyssey sure to bear fruit as the apple of one's eye.


An Historical Ri Walking Tour Rooted in the Apple Tree That Consumed Roger Williams


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An Historical Ri Walking Tour Rooted in the Apple Tree That Consumed Roger Williams



An Historical Ri Walking Tour Rooted in the Apple Tree That Consumed Roger Williams
An Historical Ri Walking Tour Rooted in the Apple Tree That Consumed Roger Williams



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Friday, April 5, 2013

Masterpieces of Terror and the Supernatural - A Treasury of thoughprovoking Tales Old and New

Masterpieces of Terror and the Supernatural - A Treasury of thoughprovoking Tales Old and New





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I get goose bumps thinking about some of tales in this collection. It's a feast for any nightmare fan - forty-seven short stories and six poems prime by Marvin Kaye with Saralee Kaye. The selections focus on psychological terror rather than blood and gore. As Kaye says in his introduction "Any story that gave my jaded spine a chill seemed to gift permissible credentials for membership in the club." These are not the more well known nightmare tales that appear over and over in anthologies, some are not easily ready anywhere else.

I have any favorites among them. "The Bottle Imp," an consuming spin on development a pact with the devil, was written in 1891 by Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson. Keawe, a native of Hawaii, buys a strange bottle from an elderly man who tells him the imp in the bottle is responsible for his wealth. The imp will also grant Keawe anything he wishes. Of policy there is a catch. If he dies with the bottle in his ownership his soul will burn in Hell. It must be sold for less than its purchase price and he may not arrange of it or give it away. Stevenson throws some twists and turns into the story and Keawe faces some horrifying choices.

"Dracula's Guest" was published posthumously after Bram Stoker's death and was probably intended to be the first episode of his novel "Dracula." The narrator is Jonathan Harker on his way to Transylvania on Walpurgis Night, the first of May, when witches and demons are about. He doesn't heed the coachman's superstitious warnings and he leaves the safety of his hotel to gad in the forest alone where he has an eerie feeling he's being watched. When he comes over an antique tomb in an old graveyard he realizes just how foolish he's been.

"Flies," by Isaac Asimov, was first published in June 1953. It's a short science fiction story about a group of old college students who meet at a reunion twenty years after graduation. They discuss their achievements and Casey tells them he does research on insecticides. Ironically the flies seem to bother him and no one else.

British novelist Tanith Lee provides a distinct take on the Cinderella story. "When the Clock Strikes" her heroine turns into a witch who swears allegiance to Lord Satanas.

"Lazarus" by Leonid Andreyev is a retelling of the miraculous return to life described in the scriptures. Lazarus returns home after being dead for three days and house and friends celebrate his resurrection. He's dressed grandly but his days in the grave left him with a bluish cast to his face and reddish cracks on his skin. His temper is changed as well. He's no longer cheerful and carefree and he's unwilling to talk about the horrors he's seen.

"The Flayed Hand" was written by Guy de Maupassant. A young pupil acquires a shriveled hand, severed at the wrist from a deceased sorcerer. He intends to use it as the handle to his door-bell to frighten his creditors, but the owner wants it back.

The impel of this variety is in its diversity. It's divided into five sections, each with stories that are unique and chilling. Some of the stories are written in a dated style that may not request for retrial to readers who like more contemporary literature. But the prose sets the mood and creates an atmosphere that invokes a sense of dread that is so excellent for this type of story - the kind that makes your skin crawl. This is a book to be picked up and read over and over again.

Publisher: Doubleday & company Inc. (May 1985)

Isbn: 978-0385185493

Pages: 623

Table of Contents

Introduction by Marvin Kaye

Fiends and Creatures
Dracula's Guest by Bram Stoker
The Professor's Teddy Bear by Theodore Sturgeon
Bubnoff and the Devil by Ivan Turgenev, English adaptation by Marvin Kaye
The Quest for Blank Calveringi by Patricia Highsmith
The Erl-King by Johann Wolfgang Von Goëthe, English adaptation by Marvin Kaye
The Bottle Imp by Robert Louis Stevenson
A Malady of Magicks by Craig Shaw Gardner
Lan Lung by M. Lucie Chin
The Dragon Over Hackensack by Richard L. Wexelblat
The Transformation by Mary W. Shelley
The Faceless Thing by Edward D. Hoch

Lovers and Other Monsters
The Anchor by Jack Snow
When the Clock Strikes by Tanith Lee
Oshidori by Lafcadio Hearn
Carmilla by Sheriden LeFanu
Eumenides in the Fourth Floor Lavatory by Orson Scott Card
Lenore by Gottfried August Bürger, English adaptation by Dante Gabriel Rossetti
The Black Wedding by Isaac Bashevis Singer, translated by Martha Glicklich
Hop-Frog by Edgar Allan Poe
Sardonicus by Ray Russell
Graveyard Shift by Richard Matheson
Wake Not the Dead by Johann Ludwig Tieck
Night and Silence by Maurice Level

Acts of God and Other Horrors
Flies by Isaac Asimov
The Night Wire by H.F. Arnold
Last Respects by Dick Baldwin
The Pool of the Stone God by A. Merritt
A Tale of the Thirteenth Floor by Ogden Nash
The Tree by Dylan Thomas
Stroke of Mercy by Parke Godwin
Lazarus by Leonid Andreyev

The Beast Within
The Waxwork by A.M. Burrage
The Silent concentrate by Pierre Courtois, translated and adapted by Faith Lancereau and Marvin Kaye
Moon-Face by Jack London
Death in the School-Room by Walt Whitman
The Upturned Face by Stephen Crane
One Summer Night by Ambrose Bierce
The Easter Egg by H.H. Munro ("Saki")
The House in Goblin Wood by John Dickson Carr
The Vengence of Nitocris by Tennessee Williams
The Informal carrying out of Soupbone Pew by Damon Runyon
His Unconquerable Enemy by W.C. Morrow
Rizpah by Alfred, Lord Tennyson
The request by Stanley Ellin

Ghosts and Miscellaneous Nightmares
The Flayed Hand by Guy de Maupassant
The Hospice by Robert Aickman
The Christmas Banquet by Nathaniel Hawthorne
The Hungry House by Robert Bloch
The Demon of the Gibbet by Fitz-James O'Brien
The Owl by Anatole Le Braz, translated by Faith lancereau
No. 252 Rue M. Le Prince by Ralph Adams Cram
The Music of Erich Zann by H.P. Lovecraft
Riddles in the Dark (Original Version, 1938) by J.R.R. Tolkien
Afterword
Miscellaneous Notes
Selected Bibliography


Masterpieces of Terror and the Supernatural - A Treasury of thoughprovoking Tales Old and New


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Love Craft

Masterpieces of Terror and the Supernatural - A Treasury of thoughprovoking Tales Old and New



Masterpieces of Terror and the Supernatural - A Treasury of thoughprovoking Tales Old and New
Masterpieces of Terror and the Supernatural - A Treasury of thoughprovoking Tales Old and New



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