Wide Angle View, Close Up

Though there is some rectilinear distortion with my 19 millimeter lens, it gives a massive, projecting quality to the stairway balustrades.

Inasmuch as I have looked into my folder for better outside pictures, and better inside pictures, it turns out that all of the rest would be sort of redundant; thus, our tour is fairly complete. But I want to leave you with some high falutin' rhetoric, here.

Why would anyone want to put one of their loved ones in the ground, when they could have him or her interred in a building that reminds one of the magnificent tombs of the pharaohs, emperors, kings, and saints? Isn't your loved one worth being surrounded by finely finished, timeless marble? The ancient Greeks, who built some of the most beauitiful buildings we have from antiquity, used precisely cut and finely finished marble for these buildings of theirs.

So have we!

Think about having your loved one interred like Royalty; you loved him or her, so she or he was Royalty to you. I loved Theresa for 36 years; I wasn't about to let dirt be thrown on top of her. Money should be no object; the interment of your Royal kinsman or kinswoman is going to be for a much longer time than that recent new automobile you may have purched; it is going to rust away.

The next time you visit the cemetery, perhaps to visit a loved one,
stop by the office and inquire about purchasing a crypt; think about submitting a design for your loved one's crypt panel; the mausoleum is only about half full. Your loved one belongs in this fine building.

Contact
Enid Cemetery
212 West Willow,
Enid, Oklahoma 73701

enidcemetery@sbcglobal.net

© 2008 David Anthony Harbour

Contact the Web Master
(website caretaker), Bill Welker,
via E-mail

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