Yo! Howya Doin' ?
No Pain, No Qualm,
No Victory Palm;
No Thorns, No Groan,
No Ultimate Throne;
No Bitter Gall,
No Glory At All;
No Glory At All;
No Cross to Bear,
Then
Then
No Crown to Wear.
Today's words are my own adaptation
from William Penn's quote.
William Penn was
an Englishman and
one of the first Quakers.
Link
Once, he was
proprietor/owner
of today's US State
of Pennsylvania
(which means Penn's Woods).
Penn received a royal charter
from the King of England
In 1681
to form a new colony in America.
He envisioned a peaceful refuge
for all beliefs.
Penn was known for
fair dealing with ALL
including the
Original Inhabitants.
He named his capitol city:
Philadelphia "Brotherly-Love City"
Founding it on October 27, 1682
Link
The City of Brotherly Love,
[or "The Quaker City".
As it is also called]
still benefits from the
sensible grid pattern
of streets
that Penn laid out,
and punctuated with
capacious parks and Squares.
His urban design
left it's mark
on modern cities today!
Until relatively recently,
William Penn's heroic statue
atop Philadelphia City Hall
was the tallest point in the city
by gentlemen's agreement.
Pennsylvania calls herself
a Commonwealth:
"The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania."
Philadelphia began as a place of
tolerance
during an age of religious tests
and religious violence,
flourishing thereby
in Medicine, Arts, Sciences,
Commerce, and Government.
You may have heard
of something called
The Declaration of Independence,
or the US Constitution.
They were both created
by delegates in Philadelphia.
Many good things got their
start in Philly,
and I don't just mean
cheese-steaks, soft pretzels,
and Stetson cowboy hats!
I was born there.
No. I never met
William Penn!
(impertinent!)
Next week brings
my birthday.
Thanks for coming along
on this nostalgia trip!
Today's words are my own adaptation
from William Penn's quote.
" No pain, no palm;
no thorns, no throne;
no gall, no glory;
no cross, no crown. "
William Penn
no thorns, no throne;
no gall, no glory;
no cross, no crown. "
William Penn
(1644 - 1718)
William Penn was
an Englishman and
one of the first Quakers.
Link
Once, he was
proprietor/owner
of today's US State
of Pennsylvania
(which means Penn's Woods).
Penn received a royal charter
from the King of England
In 1681
to form a new colony in America.
He envisioned a peaceful refuge
for all beliefs.
Penn was known for
fair dealing with ALL
including the
Original Inhabitants.
He named his capitol city:
Philadelphia "Brotherly-Love City"
Founding it on October 27, 1682
Link
The City of Brotherly Love,
[or "The Quaker City".
As it is also called]
still benefits from the
sensible grid pattern
of streets
that Penn laid out,
and punctuated with
capacious parks and Squares.
His urban design
left it's mark
on modern cities today!
Until relatively recently,
William Penn's heroic statue
atop Philadelphia City Hall
was the tallest point in the city
by gentlemen's agreement.
Pennsylvania calls herself
a Commonwealth:
"The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania."
Philadelphia began as a place of
tolerance
during an age of religious tests
and religious violence,
flourishing thereby
in Medicine, Arts, Sciences,
Commerce, and Government.
You may have heard
of something called
The Declaration of Independence,
or the US Constitution.
They were both created
by delegates in Philadelphia.
Many good things got their
start in Philly,
and I don't just mean
cheese-steaks, soft pretzels,
and Stetson cowboy hats!
I was born there.
No. I never met
William Penn!
(impertinent!)
Next week brings
my birthday.
Thanks for coming along
on this nostalgia trip!
Warmly, Cloudia
William Penn was an intellectual innovator for his time, a great man!
ReplyDeleteAs for the statue on top, sometimes a guy just has to go!
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThese greens are beautiful! I love plants!
ReplyDeleteWithout him the state would have just been sylvania
ReplyDeleteI'll be in Philly in 8 days for a soujourn with 100 kids. Yikes!
ReplyDeleteseems you had a good start there, too. :)
ReplyDeleteOne of my ancestors came to America to work for William Penn in 1740.
ReplyDelete~
Been a long time since I thought about William Penn, although I remember reading about him in history class in high school.
ReplyDeleteAloha Cloudia, great goodness in your words and delightful captures, wow! I'm putting on my crown and hoping to stay dry this weekend with all our party stuff! Send us some sunshine okay?!
ReplyDeleteTerrific use of the quote, Cloudia... and such beautiful skies!
ReplyDeleteYes! Thanks to each of Thee ♥
ReplyDeleteI have many Quaker friends Cloudia and several of them come to our Poetry afternoon, so I shall read this.
ReplyDeleteand if you go to the football stadium....dont wear the other teams jersey, just saying....ha....
ReplyDeleteso true that little gain, true gain, comes without work....
aloha from va
Happy birthday for next week. A very happy birthday - full of love and laughter.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes for your birthday, Cloudia!
ReplyDeleteBest wishes for your birthday, Cloudia!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing about Penn's woods... Happy upcoming birthday. Hope you're revving up for a blow-out celebration!
ReplyDeleteOh, this is great, Cloudia. Penn was amazing, and your home state is a remarkable place for the great experiments in community buiding that have successfully taken place there.
ReplyDeleteI remember my first trip to Philadelphia and seeing so many very different types of people reconnoitering on the wide sidewalks in front of places where our history was made.
Beautiful you!
How weird for the statue to have that profile, hmmm.
ReplyDeleteHappy Birthday wishes your way! So, you'll always be just a bit older than I, eh?
DrumMajor
Penn, a truly great man of vision. We could use a lot more of them.
ReplyDeleteOh such an enjoyable read!
ReplyDeleteOh such an enjoyable read!
ReplyDeleteGosh I love seeing each of you here and reading your comments!
ReplyDeleteThanks very much