Friday, October 3, 2008, 12:58 PM PST [
General]
‘Twould appear unto the eye that difficult times have
visited us for a time. Yea, the four horsemen of the Apocalypse do stalk land
bringing woe within their swath.

War, pestilence, famine, and death, itself,
make their selves known whenever aetherial portraits from across this world
enter our homes during the eve’s tidings as we sup during the last meal of the
day.
In this land the forces of nature ravage our shorelines and
disrupt the channels of commerce far inland bringing with its destruction
shortages of petrol, food, and shelter and untold human misery.
Hurricane Ike
The great financial institutions of this land
falter from gross mismanagement and unmonitored greed by those in they who
trust was placed. The loss of one’s
labor, one’s dwelling, one’s sense of the future mounts with each passing day
and its end be not in sight.
And there be those amongst us who would tell us that these
events be but a foretelling of greater tragedies yet to come as the end of the
world be nigh if one would but seek the Holy Writ. But to them, I would say
nay, goodly sir, nay; ‘tis not the end, but a cycle we have endured time after
time on the turning of the great wheel.
For those without the perspective of historie, the future
doth seem bleak indeed unto the eye and the ear as calamity upon calamity doth
rush upon us. We need to look no farther
than the previous century with its two world wars and plenteous smaller ones;
its abundance of world wide, unrestrained, pestilences; the collapse of its
financial system,

and the growing famine upon the continent of Africa 
and its
increasing social unrest that doth horrow governments’ right to rule.

The 14th Century Europe be plagued with the same and more I would have beknown. Humanity bethought that
the world be at its end by such and did crieth forth unto the Church, that hath
split asunder, and did it give not the succor unto those cries.

New cults did arise therefore – the Flagellants,
the Lollards – and so too did more cries for reform storm the heavens, but unto
deafened ears, until the land laith prostrate and none knoweth where to turn
for safe haven.

To the able reader, these but be two examples of the
turnings of the wheel befound in the annals of historie – there be others to be
sure. Therefore, let not the malignant despair creep upon thee and steal from
thee thy content, but seek ye the ways of opportunity as did those who came
before us, and in finding such, did bemake a brave new world. And so can we, if we but have faith in
ourselves.
