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History Repeats itself

19 replies

Jenasaurus · 04/04/2020 17:19

History repeats itself. Came across this poem written in 1869, reprinted during 1919 Pandemic.
This is Timeless....
It was written in 1869 by Kathleen O’Mara:
And people stayed at home
And read books
And listened
And they rested
And did exercises
And made art and played
And learned new ways of being
And stopped and listened
More deeply
Someone meditated, someone prayed
Someone met their shadow
And people began to think differently
And people healed.
And in the absence of people who
Lived in ignorant ways
Dangerous, meaningless and heartless,
The earth also began to heal
And when the danger ended and
People found themselves
They grieved for the dead
And made new choices
And dreamed of new visions
And created new ways of living
And completely healed the earth
Just as they were healed.
Reprinted during Spanish flu
Pandemic, 1919
Photo taken during Spanish flu

History Repeats itself
OP posts:
flossletsfloss · 04/04/2020 17:24

Love this.

VestaTilly · 04/04/2020 17:29

Thank you so much for posting this - and the picture. Fascinating.

I recommend Danial Defoe’s Journal of the Plague Year if you haven’t read it. It purports to be an eyewitness account of London during the plague of 1665, and is thought to be based on notes made by his uncle. It’s extraordinary, and almost strangely reassuring, to read of people having the same preoccupations then as we do now. People’s concern for their livelihoods, eyeing their neighbours with suspicion and mistrust, even discussion of what plague doctors could wear to protect themselves - 17th century PPE Grin

raviolidreaming · 04/04/2020 17:30

www.oprahmag.com/entertainment/a31747557/and-the-people-stayed-home-poem-kitty-omeara-interview/

It was written during this pandemic. Sorry.

Miriel · 04/04/2020 17:33

This wasn't written in 1869. Apart from being completely wrong for the period stylistically, it'd make the writer the world's oldest woman by a considerable margin. She's interviewed here:

www.oprahmag.com/entertainment/a31747557/and-the-people-stayed-home-poem-kitty-omeara-interview/

Applejaxx · 04/04/2020 17:38

As if people in 1869 did meditation!

BooseysMom · 04/04/2020 17:39

Wow! Shock

P0lka · 04/04/2020 17:40

Absolute bollocks

Jenasaurus · 04/04/2020 21:13

Sorry if I got it wrong, I was sent it by a dear friend and thought it would be nice to share to others, I didnt question her when she said that it was from 1869 as that wasnt my reason for posting it, it was really to show weve been here before and got through it so we can do it again, it was a morale boost, sorry if I have missled anyone

OP posts:
Jenasaurus · 04/04/2020 21:15

www.democraticunderground.com/100213195967

its here too

OP posts:
ViciousJackdaw · 04/04/2020 22:21

As if people in 1869 did meditation!

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_meditation

DrMadelineMaxwell · 04/04/2020 22:26

This is a poem (15 year old) Winston Churchill wrote about the Russian flu pandemic.

Oh how shall I its deeds recount
Or measure the untold amount
Of ills that it has done?
From China's bright celestial land
E'en to Arabia's thirsty sand
It journeyed with the sun.

O'er miles of bleak Siberia's plains
Where Russian exiles toil in chains
It moved with noiseless tread;
And as it slowly glided by
There followed it across the sky
The spirits of the dead.

The Ural peaks by it were scaled
And every bar and barrier failed
To turn it from its way;
Slowly and surely on it came,
Heralded by its awful fame,
Increasing day by day.

On Moscow's fair and famous town
Where fell the first Napoleon's crown
It made a direful swoop;
The rich, the poor, the high, the low
Alike the various symptoms know,
Alike before it droop.

Nor adverse winds, nor floods of rain
Might stay the thrice-accursed bane;
And with unsparing hand,
Impartial, cruel and severe
It travelled on allied with fear
And smote the fatherland.

Fair Alsace and forlorn Lorraine,
The cause of bitterness and pain
In many a Gaelic breast,
Receive the vile, insatiate scourge,
And from their towns with it emerge
And never stay nor rest.

And now Europa groans aloud,
And 'neath the heavy thunder-cloud
Hushed is both song and dance;
The germs of illness wend their way
To westward each succeeding day
And enter merry France.

Fair land of Gaul, thy patriots brave
Who fear not death and scorn the grave
Cannot this foe oppose,
Whose loathsome hand and cruel sting,
Whose poisonous breath and blighted wing
Full well thy cities know.

In Calais port the illness stays,
As did the French in former days,
To threaten Freedom's isle;
But now no Nelson could o'erthrow
This cruel, unconquerable foe,
Nor save us from its guile.

Yet Father Neptune strove right well
To moderate this plague of Hell,
And thwart it in its course;
And though it passed the streak of brine
And penetrated this thin line,
It came with broken force.

For though it ravaged far and wide
Both village, town and countryside,
Its power to kill was o'er;
And with the favouring winds of Spring
(Blest is the time of which I sing)
It left our native shore.

God shield our Empire from the might
Of war or famine, plague or blight
And all the power of Hell,
And keep it ever in the hands
Of those who fought 'gainst other lands,
Who fought and conquered well.

stella1know · 04/04/2020 22:33

@DrMadelaineMaxwell thank you
For posting the poem. Off to look up Russian Flu now.

stella1know · 04/04/2020 22:40

If history repeats itself we had better lock up after the flu abates. In the wake of the last wave of the Spanish Flu there was a period of mad sick criminality, I hope that won’t repeat itself. Source is PaLe Rider by Laura Spinney. Hopefully completely irrelevant.

MockersxxxxxxxSocialDistancing · 05/04/2020 08:09

The Kids had a rhyme during the Spanish Flu:

I had a little hen
Her name was Henza
I opened the door
And Influenza!

BestIsWest · 05/04/2020 09:56

I remember my grandmother saying that children’s rhyme Mockers. She would have been around 7 in 1919.

Jenasaurus · 05/04/2020 11:46

wasnt ring of roses about the plague too Mocker

OP posts:
DrMadelineMaxwell · 05/04/2020 12:36

Rhyme

History Repeats itself
Wakeupsunshine · 05/04/2020 12:40

Oh so it’s a modern poem written about the present day?

SquitMcJit · 05/04/2020 12:42

Utter tripe. Sorry

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