Blixa wrote:Were there world enough and time, I'd write it myself. As it is, I have more to do than I probably have years to live. And I expect to live to a very old age : )
I wish there was an easy way to compile a work like this collaboratively. Would it require that I become a Socialist?
Oh for shame, how the mortals put the blame on us gods, for they say evils come from us, but it is they, rather, who by their own recklessness win sorrow beyond what is given... Zeus (1178 BC)
zeezrom wrote:I wish there was an easy way to compile a work like this collaboratively. Would it require that I become a Socialist?
You could set up Emmapedia.org.
I vote yes.
"And the human knew the source of life, the woman of him, and she conceived and bore Cain, and said, 'I have procreated a man with Yahweh.'" Gen. 4:1, interior quote translated by D. Bokovoy.
It might be worthwhile to tie it in with Dale Broadhurst's websites. I am sure he would be cooperative. A series devoted to the most important women in Joseph Smith's life. I mean, Emma was problematic for him, which shows her strength, in the context of the times, at least. And, of course, she raised Bidamon's son, conceived by another woman during her marriage to him.
And BY's condemnation of Lucy's book strongly suggests that the between-the lines messages DO indicate that she had an active role in the fraud.
Huckelberry said: I see the order and harmony to be the very image of God which smiles upon us each morning as we awake.
Emma married Bidamon in 1847. Lucy died in 1856. Charles Bidamon, son of Lewis Bidamon and Nancy Abercrombie, was born in 1864. Emma died in 1879. Lewis Bidamon later married Nancy.
Huckelberry said: I see the order and harmony to be the very image of God which smiles upon us each morning as we awake.