Monday, December 27, 2004
Listen baby
I wonder why sometimes we fall apart oh yeah
Together we are so wonderfull yeah baby
And every single day i pray, that really things shouldnt never be this way
Im only trynna be a better man
Why then do you see all the negative things, in me?
Cos all i ever do is try to be, all that i can be
boy you know your hurting me, all the things you say to me
As i lie at night im imagining things, how it used to be, boy you know your hurting me
What am i to do with a broken heart?
All the time everybody say that you and me are over
But i know were meant to be together for eternity
Was it untrue what we promised eachother?
Baby my heart keeps telling me
That it shouldnt be this way forever
Im only trynna be a better man
boy remember when, we made our promises?
That we would be together through-out every single thing
Now im only trynna be a better man, but you've never noticed that
boy i truely love, to be around you
And baby ill give you anything you want me to
Cos i know this might be hard for you,
And i know that we will be
Posted at 06:33 pm by chamibear
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AFTER A LONG TYM, I WAS ABLE TO CHECK MY PAGE AGAIN.. SO SWEET NMAN SOMEONE LEFT A MESSAGE ON MY TAG BOARD NAMELY SAM ND AKWAN..HEHE.HELO TO U GUYZ!!!!. WHATTA SHALOW PERSON..!! DAT'S ME NMAN TLGA EH!! IM SO MSAYA NA!! SO TO ALL THE PEEPS OUT THERE LEAVE ME A MESSAGE HA???!! IM BEGGING ALL OF YOU.. HEHE..I'LL TRY TO POST ANOTHER ARTICLE OR EVEN A CUTE POEM MAYBE WITHIN THIS WEEK..HOPE YOU'LL LIKE IT!!AND TO MARKIE WHO'S MAKING KULIT!! ETO NA!!
Posted at 05:51 pm by chamibear
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Thursday, December 16, 2004
She Walks In Beauty
Lord Byron's poem titled, "She Walks in Beauty," is a love poem about a beautiful woman and all of her features. The poem appears to be about a lover, but in fact was written about Byron's cousin, Anne Wilmot, whom he met at a party in a mourning dress of spangled black. Byron shows a mixing of the darkness and the light He doesn’t show this by describing the dress or the way the woman acts, but by describing her physical beauty as well as her interior beauty. In the beginning of the poem, the reader is given the image of darkness: "She walks in beauty, like the night," but then the line continues explaining that the night is cloudless and the stars are bright. In lines three and four Byron emphasizes that the unique feature of the woman is her ability to contain opposites within her; "the nest of dark and bright/meet" in her. The joining together of the darkness and the light can be seen in her "aspect," or appearance, but also in her "eyes." In this case, the woman's eyes aren't to be associated with a physical feature, but more as an internal aspect of her. The eyes reveal her heart. Beginning with line five, the word "meet" is emphasized again as she creates a "tender light," not the gaudiness of daytime, but a gentler light that even "heaven…denies." Although this poem begins with the image of a woman walking, there are no images given by Byron of her legs or arms or feet; this is a head poem, confined to hair, eyes, face, cheeks, and brows. In the third stanza, Byron ends the poem with three lines a physical description that lead to the final three lines the woman's moral characterization. Byron uses many antonyms to describe this woman but still shows a perfect balance within her, often using opposites like darkness and light to create this balance. "She Walks in Beauty" is world renowned for its powerful description.
Posted at 09:17 am by chamibear
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