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Jazzman - Carole King
'When the jazzman's testifyin' a faithless man believes
he can sing you into paradise or bring you to your knees
It's a gospel kind of feelin' a touch of Georgia slide
a song of pure revival and a style that's sanctified'
Was Berliner und Berlinerinnen so mitzuteilen haben, gesammelt von "Notes of Berlin", plakatiert auf dem U-Bahnhof Schillingstraße. Berlin 2023.
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© All rights reserved D Jensen.
The metering on the necklace sets the tone for the rest of the photo
Nomad theme..memories
This note book is over twenty five years old. When I pick it up it
gives me a good idea of what was going on in my head at that time.Its
mostly visual,ideas but also poems, quotes, recipes,, my first and
last crossword,post cards,stamps,song chords etc.ect. On this page is
how to make a date and walnut cake,ideas for christmas card and a
couple of illustrations .
the subtle cues.
those that exist already in your environment
you know them best when you ignore them
they exist for you to push past that deliberate ignorance, that self-injurious psychological barrier
be still, be watching
there is no haunting
but the cues will tell you what needs to be
She turned into a real roommate, and we soon discovered how fun it could be playing "hit the Yalie in the ass with the laser pointer" from our third floor living room window while drinking lots of beer. Furgalackamattack!
My travels around the UK by car for three weeks with my son. June/July 2019 Wales.
Day eight ..making our way to Aberystwyth for the night. We stopped in the Village of Hay-on-Way to look at the book shops and to get some lunch.
Hay-on-Wye, often abbreviated to just "Hay", is a small market town and community in the historic county of Brecknockshire (Breconshire) in Wales. With over twenty bookshops, it is often described as "the town of books", and is both the National Book Town of Wales and the site of the annual Hay Literary Festival.
The settlement's name is first referred to between 1135 and 1147 as Haya; in 1299 the name of La Haye is used. By the 16th century it was simply called Hay, and the use of the river as a suffix is a later addition. In 1215, a Welsh name, Gelli was recorded, and Gelli gandrell in 1614; the two names may have been used concurrently in 1625. The English language name, Hay, is derived from Old English hæg, possibly meaning a "fenced area" and a noun used in late Saxon and Norman times for an enclosure in a forest. The Welsh word celli (lenited to Gelli) has a range of meanings including wooded areas of various extents.
For More Info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hay-on-Wye