Choose quotes font
Usually a poem takes shape accoustically - a line or a pair of lines will repeat itself in my ear.
Usually a poem takes shape accoustically - a line or a pair of lines will repeat itself in my ear.
Usually a poem takes shape accoustically - a line or a pair of lines will repeat itself in my ear.
Usually a poem takes shape accoustically - a line or a pair of lines will repeat itself in my ear.
Usually a poem takes shape accoustically - a line or a pair of lines will repeat itself in my ear.
Usually a poem takes shape accoustically - a line or a pair of lines will repeat itself in my ear.
Next quotes
Thomas Lynch:
Well the themes for me were and remain sex and love and grief and death - the things that make us aThomas Malory:
And much more am I sorrier for my good knights' loss than for the loss of my fair queen; for queensThomas Malory:
For as well as I have loved thee heretofore, mine heart will not serve now to see thee; for throughThomas Malory:
For love that time was not as love is nowadays.Thomas Malory:
For, as I suppose, no man in this world hath lived better than I have done, to achieve that I haveThomas Malory:
King Pellinore that time followed the questing beast.Thomas Malory:
The month of May was come, when every lusty heart beginneth to blossom, and to bring forth fruit.Thomas Malory:
This beast went to the well and drank, and the noise was in the beast's belly like unto the questinThomas Malory:
Through this same man and me hath all this war been wrought, and the death of the most noblest knigThomas Malory:
What, nephew, said the king, is the wind in that door?