In this poem the poet(A Lover) describes a lady's persona and her way of thinking and living, he explains how she is stranger to him but still he loves her a lot. he is now desperate to meet her ...
Can the Odyssey end? The strange epilogue at the end of the poem and much later European poets' interpretation of it, beginning with Dante, complicate the conclusion of the epic.
The poem is about a man reminiscing about his friend Clancy who he used to know when Clancy worked as a sheep shearer. The man had tried to contact Clancy by letter years ago but was told in response that Clancy had gone to Queensland to work as a cattle drover instead. The man envies Clancy's freer lifestyle out in the bush and thinks he would prefer Clancy's job droving cattle compared to his own confined office work in the city.
The document is a summary of quotes from the novel "The Book of Negroes" by Lawrence Hill. It contains warnings for African people about large bodies of water and the color pink. The quotes warn that water can lead to losing one's freedom and vanishing shores. They also advise cultivating a distrust of the color pink, as when it spills across water at sunset it can disguise the path of a slave vessel. One quote expresses shuddering at the thought of all the Africans lost in the deep depths of the ocean.
A goddess created the oceans as a place for her love, waiting for him by the light of the moon. He brought her a white rose with a scent of serenity. Though he promised to return, he did not, and she cried, pricking her finger on the rose's thorn and turning it red with her blood, like the wine they shared. The roses that grew thereafter were red in memory of her lost love.
A goddess created the oceans as a place for her love, waiting for him by the light of the moon. He brought her a white rose with a scent of serenity. Though he promised to return, he did not, and she cried, pricking her finger on the rose's thorn and turning it red with her blood, like the wine they shared. The roses that grew thereafter were red in memory of her lost love.
The document is a poem asking for a hand to help the speaker leave their past behind and achieve great things. It lists over 20 things the speaker would do if given a hand, such as face challenges with victory, reach the stars, illuminate darkness, ignite flames, sing until time immemorial, and transform the land into paradise. The overall message is a plea to the beloved to give their hand so the speaker can rise up, surge forward with passion, and lead more bright days while leaving their hopeless past behind.
The musical theme of the 1970 film Love Story is performed by Katharine McPhee. The song lyrics tell the story of a great love that is older than the sea and gives meaning to an empty world. It describes how being with their love fills one's heart and soul with special things.
The document provides lyrics to the song "Where Do I Begin" which was performed by Katharine McPhee for the 1970 film Love Story starring Ali McGraw and Ryan O'Neal. The song describes the love between a couple and how the man fills the woman's heart and soul with love.
Can the Odyssey end? The strange epilogue at the end of the poem and much later European poets' interpretation of it, beginning with Dante, complicate the conclusion of the epic.
The poem is about a man reminiscing about his friend Clancy who he used to know when Clancy worked as a sheep shearer. The man had tried to contact Clancy by letter years ago but was told in response that Clancy had gone to Queensland to work as a cattle drover instead. The man envies Clancy's freer lifestyle out in the bush and thinks he would prefer Clancy's job droving cattle compared to his own confined office work in the city.
The document is a summary of quotes from the novel "The Book of Negroes" by Lawrence Hill. It contains warnings for African people about large bodies of water and the color pink. The quotes warn that water can lead to losing one's freedom and vanishing shores. They also advise cultivating a distrust of the color pink, as when it spills across water at sunset it can disguise the path of a slave vessel. One quote expresses shuddering at the thought of all the Africans lost in the deep depths of the ocean.
A goddess created the oceans as a place for her love, waiting for him by the light of the moon. He brought her a white rose with a scent of serenity. Though he promised to return, he did not, and she cried, pricking her finger on the rose's thorn and turning it red with her blood, like the wine they shared. The roses that grew thereafter were red in memory of her lost love.
A goddess created the oceans as a place for her love, waiting for him by the light of the moon. He brought her a white rose with a scent of serenity. Though he promised to return, he did not, and she cried, pricking her finger on the rose's thorn and turning it red with her blood, like the wine they shared. The roses that grew thereafter were red in memory of her lost love.
The document is a poem asking for a hand to help the speaker leave their past behind and achieve great things. It lists over 20 things the speaker would do if given a hand, such as face challenges with victory, reach the stars, illuminate darkness, ignite flames, sing until time immemorial, and transform the land into paradise. The overall message is a plea to the beloved to give their hand so the speaker can rise up, surge forward with passion, and lead more bright days while leaving their hopeless past behind.
The musical theme of the 1970 film Love Story is performed by Katharine McPhee. The song lyrics tell the story of a great love that is older than the sea and gives meaning to an empty world. It describes how being with their love fills one's heart and soul with special things.
The document provides lyrics to the song "Where Do I Begin" which was performed by Katharine McPhee for the 1970 film Love Story starring Ali McGraw and Ryan O'Neal. The song describes the love between a couple and how the man fills the woman's heart and soul with love.
The document summarizes different approaches to translating texts from one language to another. It discusses Friedrich Schleiermacher's view that a translator should either move the reader toward the original writer or move the original writer toward the reader. It notes that Schleiermacher favored moving the reader toward the writer by providing the same experience as reading the original text. The document also provides an example of a poem by Miguel Hernández translated into English.
This story describes a walk through Canada taken by God. During the walk, God admires His creation across the land from sea to sea and river to ends of earth. He smells incense and hears singing, dancing, and calls of His name from scattered fires. God delights in the Rocky Mountains, prairies, lakes, and oil towers pointing to the sky. He sees fires have spread and smiles at two men working to bring unity. God's eyes scan the Great Lakes and Saint Lawrence Seaway before landing in Toronto, a place where many come to meet the Loving Father.
The document describes a vision of Heaven as a perfect place without suffering. It depicts Heaven as a beautiful city with golden streets, crystal buildings, and parks with laughing children and gentle animals. The document emphasizes that Heaven is a real place that departed loved ones currently inhabit, and that one day believers will join them there in a state of eternal joy.
The document is a collection of romantic poems expressing love and longing for a partner. It describes dreaming of being together by the sea and candlelight, feeling one's love when gazing into their eyes, vowing to build a lifetime of happiness together, hearing their partner's voice on the wind, and asking to dance with and love them.
The document discusses training different parts of the body and mind to always act with compassion and goodness. It instructs training the mind to think positively, training hands to help others, training lips to spread happiness, and so on for various other body parts. It emphasizes training each part to benefit humanity, spread truth, empathize with all living beings, and bond people together in friendship. The concluding lines say the heart should remain freely able to spread love as created by God, without manipulation or cheating.
The document expresses contradictory feelings about various objects and experiences. While certain things like mountains, pens, clouds, and watches are loved for their benefits, they are also hated when they cause harm, such as through avalanches, death sentences, floods, or announcing the time of death. Other objects and experiences like fires, fish, trees, and unrequited love are similarly loved for positive attributes but hated when they result in negative outcomes like death, injury, or a one-sided passion. Throughout, there is a contrast drawn between the love and hate that different things can elicit depending on the circumstances.
The document summarizes and analyzes different stanzas from the poem "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. It discusses the themes of respecting nature and God's creations. The Mariner tells his story to a group of wedding guests about how he was cursed for killing an albatross and his journey to gain absolution. The analysis focuses on the religious and symbolic imagery throughout the poem.
The poem is about a person who received a letter from someone traveling, expressing concern that the traveler may lose or forget the deep love and sense of home they share if they travel too far or too long. The writer hopes the traveler understands there is a special place for them in the writer's heart, and no one else can love the traveler as much, encouraging them not to lose that connection through endless wandering.
These poems explore themes of love, longing, passion and loss. Many describe intense romantic feelings for a lover, from longing to be together to the pain of a breakup. One poem reflects on watching past loves find new partners while feeling lonely. The styles range from heartfelt declarations of love to more melancholy reflections on lost love and memories.
This document discusses themes of love, friendship, and heartbreak through a collection of poems and quotes. It explores the fleeting nature of love compared to the enduring power of true friendship. Friendship is described as delicate yet long-lasting, providing support in difficult times. While love can hurt, real friends accept each other's flaws and are there in times of need.
This document discusses themes of love, friendship, and heartbreak through a collection of poems and quotes. It explores the fleeting nature of love compared to the enduring power of true friendship. Friendship is described as delicate yet long-lasting, providing support in difficult times. While love can hurt, real friendship is a sanctuary.
The document discusses different aspects of love. It states that love is blind in that it allows one to see pathways to their will without actual eyesight. It also calls love a form of madness, referencing the inconstancy of the moon as a reason not to swear by it. Finally, it portrays love as a religion through idolatry of one's beloved, and as eternal like the sea in its bounty and depth.
The document is a song lyrics about longing for a love that seems far away and remembering happier times spent together in the past. The singer feels lonely and wonders where their love is now. They hope and pray that their dreams will take them to a place where they can see their love again, with blue skies and green fields, and hold them in their arms once more.
His second volume of original works of poetry and prose, Don MacIver delivers a large collection of acclaimed works of verse...romantic, relationships, loss, illness and grief, our incredible natural surroundings and so much more.
This work of love and devotion is dedicated to the author/poet's loving wife Andrea who has been such a tremendous inspiration in his life and writing.
The document provides biographical information about American singer-songwriter Jeff Buckley and summaries of several of his songs from his album Grace, including "Grace," "Lover You Should've Come Over," "Dream Brother," "Eternal Life," and "Last Goodbye." The summaries highlight themes of love, loss, spirituality, and mortality in Buckley's lyrics.
The romantic poem describes a lover's longing on a twilit evening in May, with references to turtle doves calling, flowering trees, and the nightingale's love songs. The burning tears of the lover are reflected in the darkly complaining lake as the sun's light takes a path through the azure deeps. The letter expresses missing the lover even when together, and an overwhelming feeling of love that causes constant blushing, with the confession of love ultimately being what matters most.
The song expresses the singer's love for their partner and their desire to be loved in return. It describes how being with their partner makes their dreams feel real and changes their life for the better. The chorus reiterates that the singer loves being loved by their partner more than anything and wants to convey this to them through both words and touch.
This document contains a collection of poems by Carolyn Venable exploring themes of love, nature, and artistic inspiration. The poems depict memories of a lost love under the night sky ("Indigo Dreams"), a promise to return to a loved one ("A Promise That Kept for You"), observations of the changing seasons and harvest in autumn ("Autumn Whispers"), appreciation for Vincent van Gogh's artwork ("A Starry Night Tribute"), longing for a connection with a special person ("I Dreamed of You"), and finding peace in the transition from day to night ("Dusk Awaits"). The concluding message encourages appreciating one's inner poet.
The document appears to be lyrics from a love song. It describes how the singer used to believe love was out of reach for them, but now they have found perfect love with their partner. The chorus reiterates that salvation and paradise have been found in their partner's arms. A second verse further expresses how their partner came into their life at just the right time and filled an emptiness they once had.
This document contains several poems about love and Valentine's Day. The poems express feelings of love, gratitude for a partner, and finding meaning and purpose through romantic love. They describe love as transcending physical or earthly constraints and filling one with joy, purpose and light.
This love story describes how a person found the meaning to their empty life through meeting the love of their life. They express how this person fills their heart and soul with so much love. No matter where they go, they are never lonely as long as they have this person by their side. They have no idea how long their love will last, but know they will need this person until their love for them burns away.
The document summarizes different approaches to translating texts from one language to another. It discusses Friedrich Schleiermacher's view that a translator should either move the reader toward the original writer or move the original writer toward the reader. It notes that Schleiermacher favored moving the reader toward the writer by providing the same experience as reading the original text. The document also provides an example of a poem by Miguel Hernández translated into English.
This story describes a walk through Canada taken by God. During the walk, God admires His creation across the land from sea to sea and river to ends of earth. He smells incense and hears singing, dancing, and calls of His name from scattered fires. God delights in the Rocky Mountains, prairies, lakes, and oil towers pointing to the sky. He sees fires have spread and smiles at two men working to bring unity. God's eyes scan the Great Lakes and Saint Lawrence Seaway before landing in Toronto, a place where many come to meet the Loving Father.
The document describes a vision of Heaven as a perfect place without suffering. It depicts Heaven as a beautiful city with golden streets, crystal buildings, and parks with laughing children and gentle animals. The document emphasizes that Heaven is a real place that departed loved ones currently inhabit, and that one day believers will join them there in a state of eternal joy.
The document is a collection of romantic poems expressing love and longing for a partner. It describes dreaming of being together by the sea and candlelight, feeling one's love when gazing into their eyes, vowing to build a lifetime of happiness together, hearing their partner's voice on the wind, and asking to dance with and love them.
The document discusses training different parts of the body and mind to always act with compassion and goodness. It instructs training the mind to think positively, training hands to help others, training lips to spread happiness, and so on for various other body parts. It emphasizes training each part to benefit humanity, spread truth, empathize with all living beings, and bond people together in friendship. The concluding lines say the heart should remain freely able to spread love as created by God, without manipulation or cheating.
The document expresses contradictory feelings about various objects and experiences. While certain things like mountains, pens, clouds, and watches are loved for their benefits, they are also hated when they cause harm, such as through avalanches, death sentences, floods, or announcing the time of death. Other objects and experiences like fires, fish, trees, and unrequited love are similarly loved for positive attributes but hated when they result in negative outcomes like death, injury, or a one-sided passion. Throughout, there is a contrast drawn between the love and hate that different things can elicit depending on the circumstances.
The document summarizes and analyzes different stanzas from the poem "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. It discusses the themes of respecting nature and God's creations. The Mariner tells his story to a group of wedding guests about how he was cursed for killing an albatross and his journey to gain absolution. The analysis focuses on the religious and symbolic imagery throughout the poem.
The poem is about a person who received a letter from someone traveling, expressing concern that the traveler may lose or forget the deep love and sense of home they share if they travel too far or too long. The writer hopes the traveler understands there is a special place for them in the writer's heart, and no one else can love the traveler as much, encouraging them not to lose that connection through endless wandering.
These poems explore themes of love, longing, passion and loss. Many describe intense romantic feelings for a lover, from longing to be together to the pain of a breakup. One poem reflects on watching past loves find new partners while feeling lonely. The styles range from heartfelt declarations of love to more melancholy reflections on lost love and memories.
This document discusses themes of love, friendship, and heartbreak through a collection of poems and quotes. It explores the fleeting nature of love compared to the enduring power of true friendship. Friendship is described as delicate yet long-lasting, providing support in difficult times. While love can hurt, real friends accept each other's flaws and are there in times of need.
This document discusses themes of love, friendship, and heartbreak through a collection of poems and quotes. It explores the fleeting nature of love compared to the enduring power of true friendship. Friendship is described as delicate yet long-lasting, providing support in difficult times. While love can hurt, real friendship is a sanctuary.
The document discusses different aspects of love. It states that love is blind in that it allows one to see pathways to their will without actual eyesight. It also calls love a form of madness, referencing the inconstancy of the moon as a reason not to swear by it. Finally, it portrays love as a religion through idolatry of one's beloved, and as eternal like the sea in its bounty and depth.
The document is a song lyrics about longing for a love that seems far away and remembering happier times spent together in the past. The singer feels lonely and wonders where their love is now. They hope and pray that their dreams will take them to a place where they can see their love again, with blue skies and green fields, and hold them in their arms once more.
His second volume of original works of poetry and prose, Don MacIver delivers a large collection of acclaimed works of verse...romantic, relationships, loss, illness and grief, our incredible natural surroundings and so much more.
This work of love and devotion is dedicated to the author/poet's loving wife Andrea who has been such a tremendous inspiration in his life and writing.
The document provides biographical information about American singer-songwriter Jeff Buckley and summaries of several of his songs from his album Grace, including "Grace," "Lover You Should've Come Over," "Dream Brother," "Eternal Life," and "Last Goodbye." The summaries highlight themes of love, loss, spirituality, and mortality in Buckley's lyrics.
The romantic poem describes a lover's longing on a twilit evening in May, with references to turtle doves calling, flowering trees, and the nightingale's love songs. The burning tears of the lover are reflected in the darkly complaining lake as the sun's light takes a path through the azure deeps. The letter expresses missing the lover even when together, and an overwhelming feeling of love that causes constant blushing, with the confession of love ultimately being what matters most.
The song expresses the singer's love for their partner and their desire to be loved in return. It describes how being with their partner makes their dreams feel real and changes their life for the better. The chorus reiterates that the singer loves being loved by their partner more than anything and wants to convey this to them through both words and touch.
This document contains a collection of poems by Carolyn Venable exploring themes of love, nature, and artistic inspiration. The poems depict memories of a lost love under the night sky ("Indigo Dreams"), a promise to return to a loved one ("A Promise That Kept for You"), observations of the changing seasons and harvest in autumn ("Autumn Whispers"), appreciation for Vincent van Gogh's artwork ("A Starry Night Tribute"), longing for a connection with a special person ("I Dreamed of You"), and finding peace in the transition from day to night ("Dusk Awaits"). The concluding message encourages appreciating one's inner poet.
The document appears to be lyrics from a love song. It describes how the singer used to believe love was out of reach for them, but now they have found perfect love with their partner. The chorus reiterates that salvation and paradise have been found in their partner's arms. A second verse further expresses how their partner came into their life at just the right time and filled an emptiness they once had.
This document contains several poems about love and Valentine's Day. The poems express feelings of love, gratitude for a partner, and finding meaning and purpose through romantic love. They describe love as transcending physical or earthly constraints and filling one with joy, purpose and light.
This love story describes how a person found the meaning to their empty life through meeting the love of their life. They express how this person fills their heart and soul with so much love. No matter where they go, they are never lonely as long as they have this person by their side. They have no idea how long their love will last, but know they will need this person until their love for them burns away.
The document is a collection of poems that explore themes of love, memory, and identity. It references places like the Mississippi River, Everton in England, and Carolina. The poems express longing for past loves and places, as well as introspection about getting older and what is real versus imagined in one's mind. Overall it reflects on love, memory, and self through brief poetic vignettes.
The speaker describes falling in love and how their partner fills their heart, soul, and life with love and companionship. They question how long love can last, but know they will need their partner as long as their love song plays in their heart. The three sentences provide a high-level overview of the key elements and themes within the document.
This document is a collection of quotes about the nature of love. It explores how love can transcend distance, how a single person can mean the world, and how love is a journey that begins forever and ends never. Many quotes emphasize that love is best expressed through giving to others rather than retaining it selfishly. Overall the document presents love as a powerful emotion that can overcome obstacles and make ordinary lives feel magical.
The document discusses themes of love, friendship, and heartbreak through a collection of quotes and short passages. It explores how love can bring both joy and pain, the importance of true friendship, and the impermanence of romantic relationships in contrast to the longevity of friendship.
The document discusses themes of love, friendship, and heartbreak through a collection of proverbs and quotes. It contrasts the ephemeral nature of love compared to the enduring quality of true friendship, noting that while love may fade away like a rose, friendship can stand as strong as a tower for life. Friends support each other through both good and bad times, providing companionship and trust where romantic relationships sometimes fail to deliver.
The song describes a woman who is compared to natural disasters like a hurricane or wild river. She is unpredictable but draws people to her, described as having velvet skin, flowing hair, and being a preacher's daughter who rebels. Though she can be destructive, bringing pain to those she meets, she also provides warmth and wonder that makes the pain worthwhile.
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2. She was a woman of faith
The song of one love
At times, she was just a flower
At others, just fire
She was the lady i loved.
3. To winds, she would say
I can change your direction
To dreams, she would Say
I will turn you into reality
To desire, she would say
I am your fellow traveler
I will walk alongside you;
She was the lady i loved.
4. No matter
How far she set her
destination
She will never tire
To life, she would say
I will adorn you
To human beings, she
would say
Love other human beings
She was the lady i loved.
5. Beautify earth a little now
Trough God’s love
The eyes which harbor dreams
The heart nurture desires
The arms that have strength
The lips that can speak
I will continue to live
Under the shadow of God’s love
She was a very strange woman.
6. Who knows what her eyes
were seeking
Her kindness is an ocean,
Which knows no bounds.
She was the lady i loved so
much.
7. I know we 'll meet again
Don't know where
Don't know when
But on some sunny
day...because you are the
lady i loved ...