Friday 28 February 2014

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

Romantic Love Images Biograohy

source(google.com.pk)

The strange mystery surrounding the death of Christopher Marlowe and the unknown facts surrounding the life of Shakespeare has intrigued many. It has lead to serious debate surrounding the identity problem of whether Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare were in fact one and the same person... Marlowe moved in high circles within the court of Queen Elizabeth I. The chief minister and political advisor to the Queen was Sir Francis Walsingham, whose role necessitated a network of spies and it was believed that Marlow was in his employ in this capacity. Marlowe is understood to have been murdered in an inn in Deptford, London, on May 30th 1593. Marlowe and his friend Ingram Frizer were drinking together and when they were about to leave began to argue over the payment of the bill.
   

Marlowe grabbed Ingram Frizer's dagger from its sheath, there was a struggle and Ingram Frizer retrieved the dagger and struck a blow in Marlowe's eye. The blow was a lethal one and Christopher Marlowe was buried two days later in an unmarked grave. The mystery is that a week earlier a warrant had been issued for the poet's arrest. Christopher Marlowe's killer, Frizer, pleaded self-defense and received a pardon from the Queen...

Marlowe lived between 1564 -1593. William Shakepeare lived between 1564 - 1616 and details of his life have only been scrutinised recently long after Marlow's reported death which has lead to the identity problem between Shakespeare and Marlowe. Coincidently, William Shakepeare is believed to have had a problem with one of his eyes. Take a look at the image below, which gives perhaps some credence to the Marlowe / Shakespeare identity problem, there is indeed a likeness...


Express your emotions creatively and sweep your lover of his/her feet. Creatively pen down your thoughts and present it to your sweetheart on any special occasion, be it Valentines Day, his/her birthday or your anniversary.
A valentine may be a card, message, token, or gift sent by one person to another on Valentine’s Day and a person, a sweetheart chosen or greeted on the day.
Romantic Love Messages that come straight from the heart are those priceless gifts that reach out to the recipient’s heart and touch them deeply.

Here are some examples of messages that are normally used by lovers:

• Your eyes lit up my world, your smile brightened my sky.
• For today or tomorrow, be mine, forever and ever and ever.
• I feel the happiest when I think about you, coz I love you.
• I wish God gives me birth hundred times only to be your lover forever.
• “With you it’s Valentine’s Day 365 days a year.” “Said I loved you but I lied, because this is more than Love what I feel inside Said I loved you but I was wrong.
 discussion of her romance with John Keats

'Is it not extraordinary?  When among Men I have no evil thoughts, no malice, no spleen - I can listen and from every one I can learn - my hands are in my pockets I am free from all suspicion and comfortable.  When I am among Women I have evil thoughts, malice, spleen - I cannot speak or be silent - I am full of Suspicions and therefore listen to no thing - I am in a hurry to be gone - You must be charitable and put all this perversity to my being disappointed since Boyhood -  ....I must absolutely get over this, - but how?  The only way is to find the root of the evil, and so cure it.'   John Keats, in a letter to Benjamin Bailey, July 1818

'Nothing strikes me so forcibly with a sense of the rediculous as love - A Man in love I do think cuts the sorryest figure in the world - Even when I know a poor fool to be really in pain about it, I could burst out laughing in his face - His pathetic visage becomes irrisistable.'   John Keats, in a letter to his brother George, September 1819


You may read Keats's letters to Fanny at the Selected Letters page.



    ambrotype of Fanny Brawne On 8 December 1865, the front page of the London Times included the following obituary:  'On the 4 inst., at 34 Coleshill-street, Eaton-square, Frances, the wife of Louis Lindon, Esq.  Friends will kindly accept this intimation.'  The 65 year old Mrs Lindon was survived by her husband, a sales agent twelve years her junior, and three children.  The eldest, 31 year old Edmund was in government service; 27 year old Herbert and 21 year old Margaret still lived at home.  Their mother's death naturally affected them, but it was otherwise of interest only to those with memories of Hampstead forty-six years ago.  For it was there, in the autumn of 1818, that Frances Lindon had been known as Fanny Brawne.  And it was there that she met a struggling young poet named John Keats.  The anonymous Mrs Lindon was, in fact, the mysterious, unnamed beloved of the now famous Keats.

        It was seven years after her death before Fanny's identity became known.  Though she had told her children of her romance with Keats, and shown them her collection of his books and love letters, she had also made them promise to never tell their father.  But when Louis Lindon died in 1872, Fanny's children (led primarily by Herbert) were finally able to profit from their mother's story.

        And profit they did.  Though Keats had died in 1821, just 25 years old and largely unknown, the resulting years had witnessed a belated recognition of his genius.  He was now considered among the greatest English poets.  His works sold briskly and, in 1848, the first biography of Keats was published.  Written by Richard Monckton Milnes with the aid of several of Keats's friends, it nevertheless angered many others.  Like Percy Shelley's elegy 'Adonais', Milnes's biography created an image of Keats as a sickly dreamer done to death by bad reviews.  It was a sentimental portrait and psychologically false.  And though it mentioned Keats's engagement to a young lady, it never named the lady in question.

        Fanny had witnessed the growth of Keats's reputation; perhaps she had read the numerous books which eulogized him.  But she never revealed herself, nor took a noteworthy interest in his life.  Her husband knew only that she and the poet had met as neighbors in Hampstead.  Fanny never told him otherwise.

        But she had kept Keats's love letters to her, over three dozen of them; many were mere notes, others lengthy chronicles of his devotion, others jealous ramblings which revealed a heretofore new (and, to his admirers, unpleasant) aspect of Keats's character.  These letters would later be celebrated as among the most beautiful ever written.  But in the 1870s, matters were quite different.  Fanny clearly believed they were valuable, or else she would never have given them to her children.  Yet what sort of value did she envision?  Did she think they would aid scholarship?  Or give new insight into Keats's life?  Or did she intend for her children to sell them and literally profit from her long ago romance?  We do not know the answer.  We do know, however, that, upon his father's death, Herbert Lindon immediately sought to sell the letters.

        And so while no one considered the death of 65 year old Frances Lindon to be noteworthy, the name of John Keats's beloved was noteworthy indeed.  Thus began the contradictory legacy of Fanny Brawne.

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

Romantic Love Images Love Images For Him with Quotes for Myspace Dwonload To Draw Hd Tumblr For Facebook Wallpaper For Facebook Profile

No comments:

Post a Comment