You said you can't see love

Keith 2022-10-02 13:18:28

Is it not that you also have times when memories overlap.
One book, one movie, one song, sometimes you don't want to understand it all at once.
Once the communication is too efficient, it is no longer necessary to look up and see each other, and some friendships will quickly depreciate and go unnoticed.
In many cases, a book and a song are read and listened to after a few years, and the meanings are very different in different moods.
Many people understand the expression only after the time has passed, and everyone will substitute the feeling of their own situation: to express and feel: to say and do; it is only at that time.
Recently, watching various movies in my room, I can't remember all the detailed words in my mind.
I always feel that there is no cross in Charing Street, (not referring to the street scene), but I clearly remember the scene in the movie when Frankie sends a letter.
After twenty years of correspondence, when Helen sent a letter saying that she couldn't go to London because of her teeth, she was so nervous that she was worried that Frankie would not be able to take it.
In fact, the same is true. When everyone watched the Queen's coronation happily, Frankie was expressionless and lonely for a moment.
After seeing the passionate interpretation of Han Fu's unrestrained true self several times, you may find it hard to imagine such a small scene. For those who show their favorite words, it feels like the east wind is also coming.
In fact, it should not be forced to add any definition, but it seems to be a soul mate above friendship, like a paragraph: "You are really poisoned. You should understand this, Frankie, the world knows me. You are the only one left."
Helen, who was so ingenious and invisible, was three thousand miles away from Frankie. (Movie)

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84 Charing Cross Road quotes

  • Frank P. Doel: [reading "He wishes for the Cloths of Heaven" by William Butler Yeats] "Had I the heavens' embroidered cloths, Enwrought with golden and silver light, The blue and the dim and the dark cloths, Of night and light and the half light, I would spread the cloths under your feet: But I, being poor, have only my dreams; I have spread my dreams under your feet; Tread softly because you tread on my dreams."

  • Helene Hanff: Somebody gave me this book for Christmas. It's "A Great Modern Library" book. Ever seen one of those? It's less attractively bound than the "Proceedings of the New York State Assembly" and it weighs more. It was a given to me by a gent who knows I'm fond of John Donne. The title of this book is: "The Complete Poetry and Selected Prose of John Donne *and* the Complete Poetry of William Blake"? The question mark is mine. Will you please tell me what those two boys have in common except - they were both English and they both wrote.