In my line, my blood, there pulses, course through my veins the blood of those hardy souls, the first Pilgrims, those who lived and died for their faith, in the raw land, the new world living my the Compact, the covenant they crafted in the little boat, before they went ashore and cast their fate to the wilds of the North Atlantic to this beachhead on the shore, the bulwark the port to the frontier beyond so long ago, so near to home Going there, to their village, seeing people portraying my ancestors, reading more, learning more of the Speedwell, my grandfather their leader the work of my blood, my kin, their faith down through the generations, here in New England I feel the connection, the bond, with my forebears who met and welcomed their neighbors, who broke bread and gave thanks in this new place before the migration west, before the birth of a nation the rise of the colonies and the fight with the natives I know some of what they must have felt, in knowing their God seeing the God of creation, helping them, walking beside them in creating the colony, the bastion of religious freedom the beachhead indeed in this foreign land Giving thanks myself, this Thanksgiving, as they did because their God is my God, and God has blessed me too, beyond measure, beyond any earning of that blessing; by grace alone, we are blessed and we give thanks.