Coming Together tryna Make Most, Create inroads Toward communal growth enlightened approach, Muse been abused, I enthused, move minds to music, rhyme inspired don't be clueless, rise to do this, give em force source, cause powerful bruising. I came to win, cant u see, battle WE thats the Sin wrecking Goons, born to fling, win my own battle fools prattle to loose rattle out the pram, Bum dummy, sing the Blues, Tune here and Now Back to Life, Back to reality, Gravity Kicks In
ReverbNation
ReverbNation
Saturday, August 31, 2013
the Golden City
The Golden City with lyrics
Soon your trials will be over
Offered up by mercy’s hand
A better view than where you’re standing
A doorway to another land
The sweetest welcome from the Father
Gathered up and carried h-ome
We are past this time of waiting
Come let us bow before Your thr-one
~Chorus~
We will meet in the Golden City in the New Jerusalem
All our pain and all our tears will be no more
We will stand with the hosts of heaven
And cry holy is the Lamb
We will worship and adore You evermore
Never can the powers of darkness
Neither death nor even l-ife
Let nothing ever separate us
From the holy love of G-od
~Chorus~
(We will meet in the Golden City in the New Jerusalem)
(All our pain and all our tears will be no more)
All my tears will be no more
(We will stand with the hosts of heaven and cry) holy is
the Lamb
(We will worship and adore You evermore)
(We will meet in the Golden City in the New Jerusalem)
(All our pain and all our tears will be no more)
Holy holy holy is the L-amb
(Holy holy holy is the L-amb)
Mmm h-ol-y
Holy holy holy is the L-amb
(Holy holy holy is the L-amb)
Holy is the L-amb
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9iyMjeVoP8s
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Conceit
In literature, a conceit is an extended metaphor with a complex logic that governs a poetic passage or entire poem. By juxtaposing, usurping and manipulatingimages and ideas in surprising ways, a conceit invites the reader into a more sophisticated understanding of an object of comparison. Extended conceits in English are part of the poetic idiom of Mannerism, during the later sixteenth and early seventeenth century.