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Bittersweet is based on the premise that "light and dark, birth and death—bitter and sweet—are forever paired". [1] Cain encourages the reader to accept feelings of sorrow and longing as inspiration to experience sublime emotions—such as beauty and wonder and transcendence—to counterbalance the "normative sunshine" of society's pressure ...
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The leaves are alternate and simple, ovoid, and typically 5–20 cm (2.0–7.9 in) long. The flowers are small, white, pink or greenish, and borne in long panicles; the fruit is a three-valved berry. In North America, they are known as bittersweet, presumably a result of confusion with the unrelated bittersweet (Solanum dulcamara) by early ...
Bittersweet, a 1998 album by Jenny Choi; Bittersweet, a 2000 repackaging of the Wind on the Water by Crosby & Nash; Bitter Sweet (Casiopea album), 2000; Bittersweet (Blu Cantrell album), 2003; Bittersweet, a 2009 album by David Rhodes; Bittersweet (Mark Isham and Kate Ceberano album), 2009; Bittersweet (Life On Planet 9 album), 2011
Pictured is U.S. Marine Capt. Mitchell Morton in this undated handout photo from Tunnel to Towers Foundation. The foundation’s Gold Star Family Home Program paid off the Morton’s home mortgage ...
"A Saucer of Loneliness" was originally published in the February 1953 issue of Galaxy. "A Saucer of Loneliness" is a short story by American writer Theodore Sturgeon that first appeared in Galaxy Science Fiction n. 27 (February 1953).
At the end of the Civil War, a Confederate Army Sergeant walks down a road aided by a wooden crutch.He carries with him a dirty bed roll and a homemade guitar.The limping Sergeant comes across a ruined antebellum mansion which belongs to Lavinia Godwin, a Southern belle whose husband was killed in the war and whose bitterness toward the Union Army still survives.
The Tribute in Light is an art installation created in remembrance of the September 11 attacks. [1] It consists of 88 vertical searchlights arranged in two columns of light to represent the Twin Towers. It stands six blocks south of the World Trade Center on top of the Battery Parking Garage [2] in New York City.