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O Love How Deep How Broad How High: Choir and organ: 1956: Choral: It Was a Lover and His Lass: Unaccompanied choir: 1956: Choral: Praise the Lord O My Soul: Choir and organ: 1956: Opera: If The Cap Fits: Voices and orchestra: 1956: Vocal: Though Cause for Suspicion Appears: Voice and piano
O, how I faint when I of you do write, Knowing a better spirit doth use your name, And in the praise thereof spends all his might, To make me tongue-tied speaking of your fame. But since your worth, wide as the ocean is, The humble as the proudest sail doth bear, My saucy bark, inferior far to his, On your broad main doth wilfully appear.
I Give You My Love; I'll Go Where Your Music Takes Me; I'll Never Let You Down; I'll Take You Higher Than High; I Love Everybody; Images; I'm Gonna Make You Love Me; I'm in a Dancing Mood; I'm Not in Love; I'm so Much in Love; In Love; I Saw Yesterday Today; Is it Love; Isn't it Sad / She Looked at Me; It's Great to Be a Butterfly; I've Got the ...
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O love, be fed with apples while you may… (Robert Graves) /oʊ ˈlʊv bi ˈfɛd wɪθ ˈæ.pl̩z ˈwaɪl ju ˈmeɪ/ or downward— When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom'd… (Walt Whitman) /wɛn ˈlaɪ.læks ˌlæst ɪn ðə ˈdɔɹ.jɑɹd ˌblumd/ A pendeka (from the Greek for "fifteen") is a poem containing each of the above vowels once ...
Alessia Cara's new album, Love & Hyperbole, is out now The singer recently teamed up with Lenovo and Intel for the Made By campaign to make a trailer and behind-the-scenes visuals for the album
Oh 'twas in the broad Atlantic, mid the equinoctial gales That a young fellow fell overboard among the sharks and whales And down he went as a streak of light, so quickly down went he Until he came to a mermaid at the bottom of the deep blue sea
O for a Thousand Tongues to Sing" is a Christian hymn written by Charles Wesley. [1] [2] The hymn was placed first in John Wesley's A Collection of Hymns for the People Called Methodists published in 1780. It was the first hymn in every Methodist hymnal from that time until the publication of Hymns and Psalms in 1983. [3]