Saturday, October 23, 2010

Shakespere Quorted

Dear,
Shakespere describes in a full page, and nearly four collumns, in the Complete Concordance To Skakespere; relevence, for the word "dear";, Dear!
Romantic thoughts invoked?
Ahhhh, "All's well" at last.
Quartering
the lure of season, nesting seasons.
The freedom and independence that are so dearly needed, and appreciausly few and far between, to be found the enlightning elements of romance, within the sphere of relationships. Dear does quietlty nestle in between the deanery and the dear-beloved.

What romanced a way into"history" to describe some brief and broad covers, and what within the history of "romance" could be addressed to the quallity of our likenesses and ENDEARMENTS.
Savory thoughts for a rainy day, or, a gest towards the thoughts of a day when making new discoveries, encountering new people and generally having a sense of excitement and interest, are without going out of our way.
A deviation of yesterday, caresses the moment of today!

...QUART-D'ECU...
Im not sure what it means either!
Okay, the eagerness for the input is for something above average alone, something more detailed to each person for every task with great zeal and energy, whether waiting for directions, or taking the initiative..


..Link to book (see "more about...") above.
... ,,Another Link to this book to the Phrase "All's Well"
.."ALL'S WELL"- Order by: relevance page 1 of 1 pages...
By the way, It is "Shakespeare" as the Name and Author,
and not the book's titled -sphere....
Oh well, dear...
Vanity is
...alas I ramble not, nore boast, by verse or chapter, or by definition...
..just to a memoire of this post: combining personal and professional interests...
dear romance fruitfull and multiply http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=AwJS2W06sCIC&oi=fnd&pg=PT30&dq=dear+romance+fruitfull+and+multiply&ots=P1KscQ3e9W&sig=8ZWqQJ99rQoM3Vu1UrTp3Dos6F8#v=snippet&q=romance&f=false

http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=dear+romance+%22fruitful+and+multiply%22+stars&as_sdt=800&as_ylo=&as_vis=0