Guest Anton Posted July 22, 2001 Share Posted July 22, 2001 he_details.asp?ID=4545 Anton, 11H/13F Quote Link to comment
Guest EraSeek Posted July 22, 2001 Share Posted July 22, 2001 YES! YES! YES! Though there are others that may qualify at times. Read the first few lines in my "Winds of Time" cache. They are by Mark Twain. http://www.geocaching.com/seek/cache_details.asp?ID=2573 Quote Link to comment
Guest Cisupete Posted July 22, 2001 Share Posted July 22, 2001 To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive, and the true success is to labour. (from El Dorado) ------ Robert Louis Stevenson Quote Link to comment
Guest celts Posted July 22, 2001 Share Posted July 22, 2001 Can't get any better than the last one!!!! quote:Originally posted by Cisupete:To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive, and the true success is to labour. (from El Dorado) ------ Robert Louis Stevenson Quote Link to comment
Guest PneumaticDeath Posted July 22, 2001 Share Posted July 22, 2001 I have one further nominee: Robert Frost. While not always strictly apropos, look at the titles of some of his poems: The Road Not Taken ("Two roads diverged in a yellow wood.."), Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening, The Need of Being Versed In Country Things, and two more to give you pause On Going Unnoticed In a Disused Graveyard. I didn't even have to mention Sitting by a Bush in Broad Sunlight -- Mitch [This message has been edited by PneumaticDeath (edited 22 July 2001).] Quote Link to comment
Guest PneumaticDeath Posted July 22, 2001 Share Posted July 22, 2001 I have one further nominee: Robert Frost. While not always strictly apropos, look at the titles of some of his poems: The Road Not Taken ("Two roads diverged in a yellow wood.."), Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening, The Need of Being Versed In Country Things, and two more to give you pause On Going Unnoticed In a Disused Graveyard. I didn't even have to mention Sitting by a Bush in Broad Sunlight -- Mitch [This message has been edited by PneumaticDeath (edited 22 July 2001).] Quote Link to comment
Guest Markwell Posted July 23, 2001 Share Posted July 23, 2001 Aaron Copeland arranged the Shaker tune of Simple Gifts and put that folk song on the map. Although not oringially penned by Copeland, the lyrics contain the phrases... 'Tis a gift to be simple, 'tis a gift to be free 'Tis a gift to come down where you ought to be And when we find ourselves in the place that's right 'twill be in the valley of love and delight. When true simplicity is gained To bow and to bend we shant be ashamed To turn, turn will be our delight And by turning, turning we come 'round right. I also like his Fanfare for Common Man as a metaphor for the release of Selective Availability. Quote Link to comment
Guest Markwell Posted July 23, 2001 Share Posted July 23, 2001 Aaron Copeland arranged the Shaker tune of Simple Gifts and put that folk song on the map. Although not oringially penned by Copeland, the lyrics contain the phrases... 'Tis a gift to be simple, 'tis a gift to be free 'Tis a gift to come down where you ought to be And when we find ourselves in the place that's right 'twill be in the valley of love and delight. When true simplicity is gained To bow and to bend we shant be ashamed To turn, turn will be our delight And by turning, turning we come 'round right. I also like his Fanfare for Common Man as a metaphor for the release of Selective Availability. Quote Link to comment
Guest Anton Posted July 23, 2001 Share Posted July 23, 2001 Well, it isn't poetry, but I like the quote: "He that has patience may compass anything." François Rabelais (c.1490-1553) http://www.bartleby.com/100/730.29.html Quote Link to comment
Guest EraSeek Posted July 23, 2001 Share Posted July 23, 2001 Yes, I thought Robert Frost should certainly be in there for the running somewhere. When I mentioned it to my wife she suggested Ogden Nash or Lewis Carrol (you know the down the rabbit-hole guy). Sorry I did stop to look for quotes on those. Quote Link to comment
Guest bunkerdave Posted July 23, 2001 Share Posted July 23, 2001 This has to be one of the best threads I have ever seen started. Keep it going. To blaspheme: "What profiteth it a man if he gain a cache and loseth his GPS?" Or something like that. Quote Link to comment
Guest bunkerdave Posted July 23, 2001 Share Posted July 23, 2001 This has to be one of the best threads I have ever seen started. Keep it going. To blaspheme: "What profiteth it a man if he gain a cache and loseth his GPS?" Or something like that. Quote Link to comment
Guest makaio Posted July 23, 2001 Share Posted July 23, 2001 Speaking from experience (I lost my Garmin 12XL on a cache hunt), the answer be...a new eTrex! Quote Link to comment
Guest Anton Posted July 24, 2001 Share Posted July 24, 2001 Someone should make this a new topic, but here's my sad story. I lost a Garmin 12MAP on a cache hunt. Ever seen a grown geocacher cry? I have. That was after replacing my first 12MAP when it was stolen out of my truck in a break-in, along with my laptop, digital camera, 35mm camera, and ham radio. Do we have any insurance agents here? Are you offering GCer insurance yet? Anton, 11H/13F Quote Link to comment
Guest raygun_88 Posted July 24, 2001 Share Posted July 24, 2001 My recommendation would more appropriately fall into a Geocacher Pulitzer Prize nomination...Douglas Adams and his increasingly inaccurately named Hitchhikers Guide to the Universe trilogy [it ended at 5 books]. "The major difference between a thing that might go wrong and a thing that cannot possibly go wrong is that when a thing that cannot possibly go wrong goes wrong it usually turns out to be impossible to get at or repair." --from Mostly Harmless Quote Link to comment
Guest navdog Posted July 24, 2001 Share Posted July 24, 2001 " I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I intended to be " - Douglas Adams Quote Link to comment
Guest Ttepee Posted July 24, 2001 Share Posted July 24, 2001 "Experience is what you get when you don't get what you want." by the Fridge Magnet Guy Quote Link to comment
Guest PneumaticDeath Posted July 24, 2001 Share Posted July 24, 2001 "Experience is something everybody wants to have, but nobody wants to get." This was said by one of H.L. Menken, Ambrose Bierce, or Mark Twain, but I can't remember which.... -- Mitch Quote Link to comment
Guest EraSeek Posted July 24, 2001 Share Posted July 24, 2001 Here's something to recite while looking for caches out here in the Cascades: The Abominable Snowman by Ogden Nash I?ve never seen an abominable snowman, I?m hoping not to see one, I?m also hoping, if I do, That it will be a wee one. Quote Link to comment
Guest Cisupete Posted July 25, 2001 Share Posted July 25, 2001 After a long day of geocaching in the rain forests of Indiana and Illinois, my nominee for today, without hesitation is : D.H. Lawrence, for his poem "The Mosquito" http://www.library.utoronto.ca/utel/rp/poems/dhl10.html Quote Link to comment
Guest Show Me The Cache Posted July 27, 2001 Share Posted July 27, 2001 JOHN LENNON from the song HOW? from the IMAGINE album: How can I go forward when I don't know which way I'm facing? How can I go forward when I don't know which way to turn? J.R.R.TOLKEIN: Not all those who wander are lost. [This message has been edited by Show Me The Cache (edited 28 July 2001).] Quote Link to comment
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