Re: Robert Frost

I Find Karma (adam@milliways.cs.caltech.edu)
Sun, 21 Sep 1997 01:34:47 -0700 (PDT)


Hi Elin,

> I just wanted to thank you for having
>
> > But yield who will to their separation,
> > My object in living is to unite
> > My avocation and my vocation
> > As my two eyes make one in sight.
> > Only where love and need are one,
> > And the work is play for mortal stakes,
> > Is the deed ever really done
> > For Heaven and the future's sakes.
> > -- Robert Frost, from "Two Tramps in Mud Time"
>
> on your web page. I needed to see it again and as we suffer a
> dearth of English libraries here in Komaki, Japan - I turned to the
> web and came up with one hit - yours.

I truly frightens me that:
1. I am the only indexed Web page to contain these lines, and
2. I have no recollection of when I added these to my pages.

Took me 90 seconds to search around, but I eventually found it
buried in the middle of a text file that happens to be in public
space...

http://www.cs.caltech.edu/~adam/clever/clever3

Thanks for reminding me of my packrat ways. I love that poem.
And peace be with you,
Adam

> Thanks,
> Elin
>
> Elin Melchior ****** Komaki English Teaching Center
>
> JALT CALL N-SIG newsletter editor, SIGNIF listowner
>
> See "C@lling Japan" at
> http://langue.hyper.chubu.ac.jp/c@ll/c@ll.index.html
>
> elin@gol.com------office phone:0568-76-0905

----
adam@cs.caltech.edu

Humans think they are smarter than dolphins because we build cars and
buildings and start wars, etc... and all that dolphins do is swim in the
water, eat fish, and play around. Dolphins believe that they are
smarter for exactly the same reasons.
-- Douglas Adams, _So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish!_