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THOUGHT OF THE DAY
“Smile, for everyone lacks self-confidence and more than any other one thing a smile reassures them.” ~ AndrĂ© Maurois
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My love reveals objects silken butterflies concealed in his fingers his words splash me with stars night shines like lightning under th...
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Contemptuous of his home beyond The village and the village pond, A large-souled Frog who spurned each byeway, Hopped along the impe...
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An envelope arrives unannounced from overseas containing stark white sheets,
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Much as he left it when he went from us Here was the room again where he had been So long that something oh him should be seen, Or felt-and...
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So, we’ll go no more a-roving So late into the night, Though the heart be still as loving, And the moon be still as bright.
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When April bends above me And finds me fast asleep, Dust need not keep the secret A live heart died to keep.
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My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun; Coral is far more red than her lips' red; If snow be white, why then her breasts...
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So, we’ll go no more a-roving So late into the night, Though the heart be still as loving, And the moon be still as bright.
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“I had never thought of myself as an essayist,” wrote James Baldwin, who was finishing his novel Giovanni’s Room while he worked on what w...
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I cannot live with you, It would be life, And life is over there Behind the shelf
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Literature, in its broadest sense, is any written work; etymologically the term derives from Greek litaritura/litteratura "writing formed with letters", although some definitions include spoken or sung texts. More restrictively, it is writing that possesses literary merit, and language that foregrounds literariness, as opposed toordinary language. Literature can be classified according to whether it is fiction or non-fiction and whether it is poetry or prose; it can be further distinguished according to major forms such as the novel, short story or drama; and works are often categorised according to historical periods or their adherence to certainaesthetic features or expectations (genre).
Taken to mean only written works, literature was first produced by some of the world's earliest civilizations—those of Ancient Egypt and Sumeria—as early as the 4th millennium BC; taken to include spoken or sung texts, it originated even earlier, and some of the first written works may have been based on a pre-existing oral tradition. As urban cultures and societies developed, there was a proliferation in the forms of literature. Developments in print technology allowed for literature to be distributed and experienced on an unprecedented scale, which has culminated in the twenty-first century in electronic literature.
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