
“We are like books. Most people only see our cover, the minority read only the introduction, many people believe the critics. Few will know our …
We are like books.

“We are like books. Most people only see our cover, the minority read only the introduction, many people believe the critics. Few will know our …
We are like books.
You probably don’t recognize the name, Judson W. Van de Venter. I know I didn’t. However, you might recognize the hymn, “I Surrender All.” Written in 1896, it is one of his most famous hymns, still widely sung today. According to
Discipleship Ministries | History of Hymns,
this hymn was influential in the ministry of Rev. Billy Graham.
I hope you enjoy this contemplative arrangement played on lyre!
I’m reblogging this song I wrote several years ago for the “above, below” theme for
Stream of Consciousness Saturday #SoCS.
Click the original post link to hear the song and read the lyrics.
I’ve gone over the edge more than once. But who among us hasn’t? We all come to a bridge, a cliff, a drop, a precipice sometime–or many times–in our lives. It will happen, guaranteed.
You will reach a point, and another point, where it’s either stay or go, sink or swim, leap into the unknown or stay in your current situation. Stay, that is, until it becomes impossibly intolerable. And there you are again, faced with the same choice.
Do you enter that deep, dark water? Or do you remain on land, supposedly safe, yet unfulfilled?
In all kindness and hopefulness, I hope you jump into that water, even if you’re terrified! And I hope you swim deeper, ever deeper, to the fulfillment of your truest desires and the coming true of your dreams!
—
My response to Sue Vincent’s
Thursday #Writephoto Prompt: Deeper.
This English folk song is often known as “The Riddle Song.” However, it is just one of many such riddle songs, often sung as lullabies or ballads. It has become popular throughout the English-speaking world, since its possible 16th-century origin. According to
Song Facts,
some sources claim there are hidden messages in the lyrics, but there is no such mystery. At the end of the day, it’s a simple folk song, though it can indeed be a hypnotic melody.
I hope you enjoy this arrangement with a verse on ukulele and viola, one on ukulele and alto recorder, and 2 lyre verses in the middle!
Gold isn’t just simply a rock,
But something to knock off your socks!
A thought you can’t miss
That inspires your bliss!
But it comes in from out of the box!
—
A Limerick for
#Threethingschallenge #506: Box, miss, gold.
At times we all fervently wish
To travel alone, steal away…
And keep daily struggles at bay
Or banish them all with a swish!
But life is like choosing a dish–
Some options we like, others not.
Just one is too much, if a lot;
We need other tastes for the spice.
Yes, even the ones less than nice.
We’re here, and we have what we’ve got!
—
Written for
Ronovan Writes Décima Poetry Challenge Prompt No. 44: (STEAL) in the B rhyme line.
I bought a Valentine’s em-bracelet
With tiny heart and harp that grace it.
And wrapped around my wrist I place this
Token of eternal traces–
Of harmony and notes unfading…
My life’s a song, ongoing, changing,
and love as music helps me play it!
—
Written for
Cold and snow bite hard.
Trembling earth anticipates
Baby teeth of Spring!
—
Written for
Ronovan Writes Weekly #Haiku #Challenge #Prompt BITE and TEETH.

Honing with Pain the truth has sharp teeth, biting through the deepest pain, life heals what life kills How to Write a Haiku in English Form A …
Honing with Pain – a poem.
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