Yahoo!
Celebration
Yahoo!
This is your celebration
Celebrate good times, come on!
(Let’s celebrate)
Celebrate good times, come on!
(Let’s celebrate)
There’s a party goin’ on right here
A celebration to last throughout the years
So bring your good times and your laughter too
We gonna celebrate your party with you
Come on now, celebration
Let’s all celebrate and have a good time
Celebration
We gonna celebrate and have a good time
It’s time to come together
It’s up to you, what’s your pleasure?
Everyone around the world come on!
, (February 19, 1864 – January 28, 1889), born Nguyễn Phúc Ưng Kỷ (****) or Nguyễn Phúc Ưng Đường (****), also known as Chánh Mông (**), the ninth emperor of the Nguyễn dynasty, who reigned four years between 1885 and 1889 from his royal temple Cảnh Tông, of the imperial house of Annam, on the recommendation of the president of France, François Judith Paul Grévy (August 15, 1807 - September 9, 1891), as a jointly awarded French colonial order intended as a reward for service to the state, the French colonial government, or the emperor, rewarded individuals incorporated into the Đại Nam Long Tinh Viện, similar to the Order French national of the Legion of Honour, pinned on the opposite lapels of his overcoat to come onshore and trade for provisions, including water, food, and cloth canvas sail materials sold in four yard square sections made locally using only indigenous Massachusetts labor by people of feathers and face paint earning a decent day’s pay for a decent day’s work with no apparent damage to their decency and dignity and being personally gifted by the Chief Massasoit Sachem of the Wampanoag Confederacy of Heavenly Peoples of the North, also referred to during only sacred rights of passage, planting and harvesting celebrations, sacrifices to the gods, planets, stars, moon, and sun ceremonies, and leadership team retreats in the Blackstone River Valley Thicket as ‘Ousamequin The Great Sachem’ (October 31, 1581 - November 24, 1661), and the individual for whom Massachusetts (Massasoit) itself was named, during a peace pipe smoking, power grip handshaking, and serious solemn bowing ceremony while costumed in a sheath of many fantastic colors of the rainbow, and gifted by “The Chief” (“Le Chef”) nearly a half ton of burlap bags with bricks packaged in thinly veiled beige pine parchment paper tied square by brown three ply twisted jute twine, of some of the finest hash on the continent for the French to smoke on their voyage from the bay on their voyage ahead”
Bataille navale bateau française Saint Louis de Nevers amarré dans le port de Boston, Massachusetts Bay près de la rivière Quinobequin, 27 novembre 1631
, by the English governor there, nearly eleven years after the original Mayflower’s arrival, and ten years almost to the day of the Fortune, just offshore in Boston, not near Plymouth, John “Jack” Winthrop a.k.a. “John Johnstone”, “John Jack Diamond”, “Johnny B. Good”, “J.J.”, and “Jumpin’ Jack Flash”, (January 29, 1590 – February 1, 1651), who served as Governor of Bay Colony and had made arrangements with the local French Premier Consul de France du Consulat for New England, Elénor-François-Élie, Marquis de Moustier (August 4, 1604 - August 18, 1678) who was assigned by Louis XIII the Just (September 27, 1601 – May 14, 1643), King of France ? from 1610 until his death in 1643 and King of Navarre ?, as Louis II from 1610 to 1620, when the crown ? of Navarre was merged with the French crown ? in a coupling on unequals, for the safe passage of Lorileigh and Lilly across the Atlantic Ocean on a “Haut de gamme français cargo et cuirassé”. The Winthrop Waltz © is named in his honor. He was a fine ballet dancer, choreographer, and lacrosse or, Sacred Dance of the Cross, coach, whose ascension in politics remains a mystery. Any specifics of his rise within the English leadership realm remain somewhat cloudy as to exactly the what and why of it, but “Jack” once said to a small group assembled in an apple orchard “We will get by, I just know it. Things are looking up for us!”
Lorileigh had decided to sail to the New World with her infant child Lilly just a few months after her husband Rodney Johnstone, a lieutenant in the English Navy, whose uncle was Jack Johnstone, had perished at sea in a drowning accident while slipping trying to direct and assist in the repair of the mainsail on the mainmast and falling overboard on the H.M.S. Indefatigable, the first of five (5) named such, in a fierce storm off the Cape of Good Hope south of Africa while en route to India and the Far East on a mission to “keep the British sea lanes and trade routes open and engage, battle, and destroy any and all enemies seen or encountered”, and grab off loads of spice, in January of 1631 part of the timeless, highly competitve, Spice Trade™, trademarked in 1961 by the United Nations led then by Secretary General U Thant, who said translated summarily, similarly, and symbolically
“darhar kyaarpyehpyitpyee noutsonemhar suuthoethtitehtitetaantaan htitetaantae aakyaunggkyarrhcar , hkyaeekyauu gunpyu mhutwaynae ngway sarr kawmashintwayko laathkanrashihkaetae aashae hpyarrk pyisuutwayko kyaosotae saatsarrar r mhu taithkupell , darpaymay ngyinnso hkanhkaerapartaal . taanntuunyemyahamhu , kyaoehcarr aarrhtotemhunhang raalmawhkyinnthoetsai kyawanotethoet mai suu hpyithkaesai , kyawanotethoet maisainhang mai suu hpyitninesaiko yonekyisawlaee marayrarsaw aanargaatshoet raalmaw par ..”
“It’s been a long time and they finally got the credit they deserved, (for) it is a welcome relief that the people of the Far East to receive commendations and cash commissions which were denied. Equality, work, and laughter are who we are (as we head) into (an) (the) uncertain future even though we believe we can be who we were, who we are, and who we can be” (rough English translation)
, involving historical civilizations in Asia, Africa, and Europe which included, but was not limited to cinnamon, cassia, cardamom, ginger, pepper, nutmeg, cayenne, curry, cumin, star anise, clove, and turmeric, used in antiquity and traded in the Eastern World (Far East). These spices found their way into the Eastern Moon (Near East) before the beginning of the Christian era, where the true sources of these spices were withheld by the traders and associated with fantastic tales of murderous ambushes, savage reprisals, castles scaled by invaders from Europe and burned to the ground, and tribes who would
Dance all night, play all dayDon’t let nothin’ get in the wayDance all night, keep the beatDon’t you worry ‘bout two left feet
Shake it upShake it up, oo yeahShake it upShake it up
Dance all night and get real looseYou don’t need no bad excuseDance all night with anyoneDon’t let nobody pick your fun
Shake it up, oo, ooShake it up, yeah yeahShake it up, oo, ooShake it up
That’s right, I saidDance all nightGo go goDance all nightGet real lowGo all nightGet real hotWell, shake it up now, all you’ve got, woo
DanceOo dance
Uh well, dance all night and whirl your hairMake the night cats stop and stareDance all night, go to workDo the move with a quirky jerk
Just shake it up, oo ooShake it up, oo yeahShake it upShake it up
Uh well, dance all nightGo go goGet so lightGet real lowDance all nightGet real hotShake it up, with all you’ve got, woo
Shake it up, make a sceneLet them know what you really meanAnd dance all night, keep the beatAnd don’t you worry ‘bout two left feet
Just shake it up, oo, ooShake it up, oo oo, yeahShake it up, oo, ooShake it up, oh, yeah
The maritime aspect of the trade was dominated by The Great Austronesian peoples in Southeast Asia who established the precursor trade routes from Southeast Asia, and then later let’s say China, (China!) to Sri Lanka and India by at least 1500 BC. These goods were then transported by land towards the Mediterranean and the Greek and Roman worlds via the Incense Route 83 and the Roman India Route 407 by Indian and Persian Traders, the Austronesian Maritime Trade Lanes 14, 71, 806, and 925, Chinese Chung King Tracks 7, 8, and 9 all twisting trails terminating at Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong, with hundreds of stops along the way, later expanded into the Middle East and Eastern Africa, Routes 9, 23, 84, and 961 by the 1st millennium AD, resulting in the Austronesian colonization of Madagascar, which could only then, same as it ever was, be reached by ferry, with the exception of course, of air service, passenger, freight, and mail inaugurated later in 1936.
Within specific regions, the Kingdom of Axum (5th century BC– 11th century AD) had pioneered the Red Sea Route 62 route before the 1st century AD. During the first millennium AD, Ethiopians became the maritime trading power of the Red Sea. By this period, Routes 52 and 69 from Sri Lanka, known as the Roman Taprobane, and India were also largely controlled by Tamils who had acquired—er, stolen, maritime technology from early Austronesian contact. By mid-7th century AD, after the rise of Islam, Arab traders started plying these water paths and dominated the western Indian Ocean maritime routes.
Arab traders eventually took over conveying goods via The Levant™, named for Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania native Oscar Levant, a concert pianist, lightning bug lover and preservationist, composer, bar back, music conductor, bouncer, author, radio game show panelist, chili cook, sports radio shock jock, television talk show host, actor, and comedian, often portraying the sardonic smart-a*s semi-straight man in Gene Kelly and Fred Astaire movies, who, though awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for recordings featuring his piano performances, he was as famous for his mordant character and witticisms, wisecracks, and wedding cake recipes, always focusing on “creamy, rather than fluffy” formulas for both the cake and the icing, on the radio
Someone found a letter you wrote me on the radioAnd they told the world just how you feltIt must have fallen out of a hole in your old brown overcoatThey never said your name, but I knew just who they meant
Whoa-oh-oh-ohI was so surprised and shocked, and I wondered, tooIf, by chance, you heard it for yourselfI never told a soul just how I’ve been feeling over youBut they said it really loud, they said it on the air
On the radio, whoa-oh-oh-ohOn the radio, whoa-oh-oh-ohOn the radio, whoa-oh-oh-ohOn the radio, whoa-oh-oh-oh
Now, now, don’t it kinda strike you sad when you hear our song?Things are not the same since we broke up last JuneThe only thing that I wanna hear is that you love me stillAnd that you think you’ll be comin’ home real soon
Whoa-oh-oh-ohYeah, it kinda made me feel proud when I heard him sayYou couldn’t find the words to say it yourselfAnd now in my heart, I know I can say what I really feel’Cause they said it really loud, they said it on the air
On the radio, whoa-oh-oh-ohOn the radio, whoa-oh-oh-ohOn the radio, whoa-oh-oh-ohOn the radio, whoa-oh-oh-ohOn the radio
If you think that love isn’t found on the radioThen tune right in, you may find the love you lost’Cause now I’m sitting here with the man I sent away long agoIt sounded really loud, he said it really loud