Reclining Nude by Alphonse Lecadre (1870)
Be, be as you've always been
Be like the love that discovered the sin
That freed the first man and will do so again
And, lover, be good to me
Be that hope when Eden was lost
It's been deaf to our laughter since the master was crossed
Which side of the wall really suffers that cost?
And, lover, be good to me
Be as you've always been
Be as you've always been
Be, be as you've always been
True to the time and the placе you've been given
Your heart in thе world, and a world there within
And, lover, be good to me
Be there and just as you stand
Or be like the rose that you'd hold in your hand
That grows bold in a barren and an uneasy land
And, lover, be good to me
And, be as you've always been
Be as you've always been
Be as you've always been
Be as you've always been
Liberty and Fifth, Pittsburgh, ca. 1940
“Dark and Fair” by Tadeusz Styka (ca. 1908) Marthe Barnède, nicknamed Madame Sappho, is ‘a stunning brunette, with hair the color of deep shadow,’ while Colette, her young and frail lover, is described as ‘a pretty girl with lily-white skin and light blonde hair that crowned her pale ivory forehead with a riotous golden halo. (source).
— Carolina Outcrop
Flying like a fish out of water
Sea levels rising as the earth gets hotter
I think this weekend I’ll go on an alcohol bender
But at least drinks are free when you’re the bartender.
A poem begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness.
Robert Frost
Kait | XXIV | PiscesThis is my personal commonplace book
77 posts