Bury Me In The Graveyard Of Your Soul


Book Description

Bury me Along with the words, We do not have The courage To speak out. This deafening silence Between us, All these glass Shards of words, We swallow down, To protect our pride. We buried together, So many heartbreaks, Resentments, anger, Love and hate, Pain, what did we Hope to gain? Losing ourselves Piece by piece Every single day. To keep The sanity intact, We created Our own insanity. I see the questions In your eyes, I hear the disappointment, Loud and clear, In your silence; Is it a cold shoulder? That game, we volunteered To play, Turnt us into its pawns, Can’t you see, We’re both losing? No winners in this game! My stillborne love, My naive boy, We will not win This time, You and I. We bled too much, Too damaged this time. Please, Stop now, I’m not playing Any more. Bury me, In the graveyard of your soul.




Digest


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The Literary Digest


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Literary Digest


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Rotten Love For Sale


Book Description

Your rotten closure: here is our love story, all written out, wasted.




California Cultivator


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Mississippi Scenes


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Graveyard Clay


Book Description

In an Irish graveyard, the corpses are distracted by local jealousies and petty disputes assuming global importance. Their banter is full of news of above-ground happenings, received from the recently arrived. As we listen in on the gossip, rumors, backbiting, complaining, and obsessing of the local community, we learn that in the afterlife the same old life goes on beneath the sod.--







The Virgin and her Lover


Book Description

Starting from the authors’ discovery that the Persian epic poem Vāmiq and ʿAdhrā by ʿUnṣurī (11th century AD) derives from the ancient Greek novel of Mētiokhos and Parthenopē, the book contains critical editions of the Greek and Persian fragments and testimonia, with English translation and comments. The exciting story of the modern recovery of the two texts is told, and the transformations of the productive theme of The ardent lover and the virgin are traced from Greek novel to Persian poem, and through later Persian and Turkish literature. Of particular importance is the authors’ attempt to reconstruct the common plot and individual variations, adding a new work to the limited corpus of ancient novels and shedding new light on the genre of Persian epic poetry.