Heart - "Alone"
Ahhhhhhhh.....
will byers stan first human second
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

No title available
Misplaced Lens Cap
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Jules of Nature
No title available
we're not kids anymore.

⁂

Discoholic 🪩
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
Peter Solarz

Andulka

ellievsbear
Mike Driver
Cosmic Funnies
𓃗
$LAYYYTER
Show & Tell
sheepfilms

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Jordan
seen from Netherlands
seen from Argentina
seen from Tunisia
seen from India

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Algeria

seen from Switzerland
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Venezuela
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from South Korea
seen from France

seen from Jordan

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Portugal
@continentalop
Heart - "Alone"
Ahhhhhhhh.....
Aimee Mann - "Save Me"
Here, have a perfect song.
(via https://open.spotify.com/track/0EqtsCvcDjEz6svFsaV5HN)
Well, here we are. This is where we're at.
I regret nothing.
"If I Only Had a Brain" - The Wizard of Oz
Bruce Springsteen – "Thunder Road"
Show a little faith, There's magic in the night. You ain't a beauty, But hey, you're all right. And that's all right with me.
Forty years on and it's still so great.
Bob Dylan – "Lay, Lady, Lay"
Oh, my gosh.
David Bowie – "Moonage Daydream"
I'm an alligator, I'm a mama-papa comin' for you I'm the space invader, I'll be a rock 'n' rollin' bitch for you
Oh, man. Basics are basics.
David Bowie – "Five Years"
I think I saw you in an ice-cream parlour drinking milk shakes cold and long Smiling and waving and looking so fine don't think you knew you were in this song
Oh, yeah.
Bonnie Raitt – "I Can't Make You Love Me"
Oh, yeah. I mean, holy hell, what a great song. It's a weird amalgamation of country and blues and early '90s pop, and it's really great.
Along with the words and phrases that still ring out 239 years later are less noticed turns of phrase. They say a lot about the messages Thomas Jefferson and the other Founding Fathers wanted to send.
Chiasmus! Yes, please!
(A month late, but what do I care? USA USA USA)
From The Monster at the End of This Book, this is the single greatest literary image in all my imagining. I love it so much.
Oh, just damn it.
All my powers of expression and thoughts so sublime Could never do you justice in reason or rhyme Only one thing I did wrong Stayed in Mississippi a day too long
I’m feeling it. Just feeling it.
Oh, my gosh.
I was reminded today (yesterday?) of Bob Dylan’s “Mississippi” via Alan Jacobs’s Twitter account, where he quoted the same couple stanzas of the song that I thought about and journaled about only a few days ago. I’d say something about great minds, but Jacobs’s is far greater than mine, and so is Dylan’s. But Dylan’s lyrics speak to and for the heart just right sometimes, and there you are.
Here you go:
All my powers of expression and thoughts so sublime Could never do you justice in reason or rhyme Only one thing I did wrong Stayed in Mississippi a day too long
…
Well, the emptiness is endless, cold as the clay You can always come back, but you can’t come back all the way Only one thing I did wrong Stayed in Mississippi a day too long.
Damn it.
Nick Lowe – "Rome Wasn't Built In A Day"
What a lovely, lovely lilt of a song.
What an amazing person.
I’m a match for anything. Aren’t you?
Henry II, THE LION IN WINTER
Welcome, O life! I go to encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience and to forge in the smithy of my soul the uncreated conscience of my race… Old father, old artificer, stand me now and ever in good stead,
Stephen Dedalus, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (modified)
To those who know a little of christian history probably the most moving of all the reflections it brings is not the thought of the great events and the well-remembered saints, but of those innumerable millions of entirely obscure faithful men and women, every one with his or her own individual hopes and fears and joys and sorrows and loves — and sins and temptations and prayers — once every whit as vivid and alive as mine are now. They have left no slightest trace in this world, not even a name, but have passed to God utterly forgotten by men. Yet each one of them once believed and prayed as I believe and pray, and found it hard and grew slack and sinned and repented and fell again. Each of them worshipped at the eucharist, and found their thoughts wandering and tried again, and felt heavy and unresponsive and yet knew — just as really and pathetically as I do these things. There is a little ill-spelled ill-carved rustic epitaph of the fourth century from Asia Minor: — ‘Here sleeps the blessed Chione, who has found Jerusalem for she prayed much’. Not another word is known of Chione, some peasant woman who lived in that vanished world of christian Anatolia. But how lovely if all that should survive after sixteen centuries were that one had prayed much, so that the neighbours who saw all one’s life were sure one must have found Jerusalem! What did the Sunday eucharist in her village church every week for a life-time mean to the blessed Chione — and to the millions like her then, and every year since then? The sheer stupendous quantity of the love of God which this ever-repeated action has drawn from the obscure Christian multitudes through the centuries is in itself an overwhelming thought.
Dom Gregory Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy (1945). One of my favorite paragraphs I’ve ever read. (via wesleyhill)
Aw yiss.