Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Rasputina
Melora Creager said in an interview:
And do you feel strongly that the Pilgrims were cannibals?
Well, it’s so possible. I read books on disasters over and over, and I read this very dry book on the pilgrims, and all the circumstances were exactly the same as the Donner Party, and it was so long ago...
The similarities and situation between the Donner Party and the Colonial Pilgrims is both appalling, frightening, and incomplete. In both cases, you'll find one: a fairly large group of ill-prepared greenhorns pitting themselves against nature and each other; two: an insufficient willingness to endure the very real hardships of frontiering, and three: coincidental misfortune at every turn
Disasters of both camps were initially brought about by departure, delay, desert, inertia; which caused our heroes to begin their journeys at absolutely retarded times weather- wise. If fantasy is the refuge of a frightened man, and a castle in the air is a safe harbor for a foolish few, just imagine living in a hut buried twelve feet below the snow, with the sight and smell of the scattered carcasses of loved ones at your feet; it is the lay of the land, just another day. I would like to propose that cannibalism was indeed rampant among America's earliest settlers: The Pilgrims. For what does settler imply, if not the willingness to settle? To settle for a meal of human flesh if my thoughts on the subject are to be believed. In conclusion, spread the word of this. Look to the night sky, and hark back to our forefathers' shortcomings, (and your own), as you cut your meat and lay the groundwork for a new tomorrow