the poetic life
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Awe and Fright
It is apparently the impossibility of defining love in its essence in truly encompassing manner, what makes many jump in awe and in fright, when the word is spoken.
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Words at the Opera — we know enough
Wotan: Your cryptic words fill me with awe. Stay, and advice me further! Erda: You heard my words. You know enough. Wotan (Odin), is the chief God in Scandinavian mythology, and leader of the possessed. Erda is the Norse Goddess of the earth.
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Love (10.16.2020)
Love does not have rules. Love is not rules. Love is Love. Only those who do not know love, define love — like dictionaries. With friendship it is the same. The soul is the soul. Love is love. Both are oblivious to boundaries.
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Words on the Screen — maleness
Jim Burns: Why are women emotionally and spiritually so much stronger than men? Stella Gibson: Because the basic human form is female. Maleness is a kind of birth defect. The Fall — BBC Serial-Killer Drama (2013-2016) / DSI Stella Gibson (Gillian Anderson), responding to her boss, Asst. Chief Constable Jim Burns (John Lynch).
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Words at the Opera — fear
Siegfried: Is it some skill I need? Tell me! What is this “fearing”? Mime: If you’ve never felt that, you don’t know what fear is. Siegfried: How strange a feeling that must be! “Siegfried”Richard Wagner — music and libretto
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Pushing Foretelling
Here I went, again. After neglecting to finish one coffee serving, hours later I noticed the cup on the counter with some coffee left. Instead of drinking it, or washing it before going to bed, as usual, I wanted to ‘read’ the cup in its dry state the next day. I wanted to see what…
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Dilemma in the face of Lexika
=Friendship =Love That is where names and terms confine, whereas poetry transcends lines, road forks, gravities and chains, tombs, deities, loyalties, blood, sin, and surpasses conclusions. Names allow the contentment of the believer, while poetry knows, even in the absence of commonly recognizable surfaces. suprema







