Tuesday, 9 September 2014

Woman don't cry

Текст песни



Said I remember when we used to sit



In the government yard in Trenchtown



Oba, ob-serving the hypocrites



As they would



mingle with the good people we meet



Good friends we have had,



Said, said,



Said I remember when we used to sit



In the government yard in Trenchtown



And then Georgie would make the fire light



As it was log wood burnin' through the night



Then we would cook corn meal porridge



Of which I'll share with you



My feet is my only carriage



So I've got to push on through



But while I'm gone, I mean.



Oh, my little sister, don't shed no tears



No, woman, no cry



I remember when we used to sit



Скачать ноты Fergie - Big Girls Don't Cry (Black Eyed Peas) для фортепиано, пианино и гитары бесплатно.



Chorus:



I hope you know,



I hope you know,



That this has nothing to do with you.



It’s personal,



Myself and I,



We got some straightening out to do.



And I’m gonna miss you,



Like a child misses their blanket,



But I’ve got to get a move on with my life.



Bridge



Like a little school mate in a school yard,



We’ll play jacks and Uno cards.



I’ll be your best friend,



Как школьные приятели на школьном дворе,



I spent the day yesterday with my cousins children. Four girls under 6 years old and 3 month old Max. I'm still recovering. But it was aloy of fun.



my baby is 3 months old



REVIEW by John Anthony West, Independent Egyptologist, best-selling author and Emmy Award winner for his NBC documentary “The Mystery of the Sphinx” hosted by Charlton Heston



An extraordinary biographical novel of Egypt's great (and much maligned and misunderstood) Queen Hatshepsut. It provides a unique, in-depth and thoroughly believable portrait of the great female Pharaoh: a woman who, while wielding absolute political power, was at the same time emotionally and philosophically developed and therefore capable of conceiving the enlightened architectural and artistic masterpieces that distinguished her long reign. all the while glorying in and never losing sight of her own intense femininity.



Truth is the Soul of the Sun (a literal translation of the Queen's throne name, Maat-ka-Re) is also, to the best of my knowledge, the only novel that captures within a single volume what must have been the reality of daily life in ancient Egypt - from royalty to peasantry. It is all there and in three dimensions. the divinity-driven, Nile-blessed land in all its magical, hierarchical complexity, its profound sacred science, pervasive religious reverence, its exotic unparalleled material richness, its relentless heat, its obsession with artistic perfection and its enviable ability to unabashedly celebrate the erotic. without for a moment losing sight of the underlying 'esoteric' that fuels it.



Truth is the Soul of the Sun is an exhilarating literary immersion course that captures ancient Egypt in its entirety, the only novel I know of that even gets close.



REVIEW by Steve Donoghue for the Historical Novel Society



Truth is the Soul of the Sun, Maria Isabel Pita's historical novel about Hatshepsut. follows her subject from childhood to twenty years of ruling as Pharaoh Hatshepsut-Maatkare and includes a cast of hundreds along the way. In less adept hands, such a profusion of detail would almost certainly prove deadly (several highly publicized historical fiction tomes of the last few years come to mind), but Pita has a consummate storyteller's skill for pacing, and as a result, this long novel is an absorbing reading experience. it's a tribute to Pita's skills that Hatshepsut herself ends up towering over all other characters in this novel. The decision to follow her through every trial over years bears fruit: readers will close the book feeling they've known this remarkable woman. Highly recommended.



Product Description



The third of six books in the epic historical novel covering the entire life of Hatshepsut, the ancient Egyptian queen who was crowned king and for more than twenty years ruled on the Horus Throne of the Living as the Female Falcon, Maatkare.



Before becoming Pharaoh, Hatshepsut served as God’s Wife of Amun, an important economic and spiritual office created by her grandfather that holds the key to her mysterious and unprecedented power. Maatkare was not only a charismatic political leader, she was a mystic who inspired the wholehearted devotion of brilliant men. One of them was Senmut, a commoner she elevated to unparalleled heights of authority. But her most influential advocate was Hapuseneb, the High Priest of Amun and the Governor of the South. Hapuseneb served under three pharaohs and yet only Maatkare is represented in his tomb.



Hatshepsut’s life is a passionate story of love—for her beliefs, her country and two of its most fascinating men.



Next in the Series: Mistress of the Two Lands – Book Four



The complete epic novel: “Truth is the Soul of the Sun – A Biographical Novel of Hatshepsut-Maatkare” also available as an e-book and as a trade paperback from amazon. com.



REVIEW by John Anthony West, Independent Egyptologist, best-selling author and Emmy Award winner for his NBC documentary “The Mystery of the Sphinx” hosted by Charlton Heston



An extraordinary biographical novel of Egypt's great (and much maligned and misunderstood) Queen Hatshepsut. It provides a unique, in-depth and thoroughly believable portrait of the great female Pharaoh: a woman who, while wielding absolute political power, was at the same time emotionally and philosophically developed and therefore capable of conceiving the enlightened architectural and artistic masterpieces that distinguished her long reign. all the while glorying in and never losing sight of her own intense femininity.



Truth is the Soul of the Sun (a literal translation of the Queen's throne name, Maat-ka-Re) is also, to the best of my knowledge, the only novel that captures within a single volume what must have been the reality of daily life in ancient Egypt - from royalty to peasantry. It is all there and in three dimensions. the divinity-driven, Nile-blessed land in all its magical, hierarchical complexity, its profound sacred science, pervasive religious reverence, its exotic unparalleled material richness, its relentless heat, its obsession with artistic perfection and its enviable ability to unabashedly celebrate the erotic. without for a moment losing sight of the underlying 'esoteric' that fuels it.



Truth is the Soul of the Sun is an exhilarating literary immersion course that captures ancient Egypt in its entirety, the only novel I know of that even gets close.



REVIEW by Steve Donoghue for the Historical Novel Society



Truth is the Soul of the Sun, Maria Isabel Pita's historical novel about Hatshepsut. follows her subject from childhood to twenty years of ruling as Pharaoh Hatshepsut-Maatkare and includes a cast of hundreds along the way. In less adept hands, such a profusion of detail would almost certainly prove deadly (several highly publicized historical fiction tomes of the last few years come to mind), but Pita has a consummate storyteller's skill for pacing, and as a result, this long novel is an absorbing reading experience. it's a tribute to Pita's skills that Hatshepsut herself ends up towering over all other characters in this novel. The decision to follow her through every trial over years bears fruit: readers will close the book feeling they've known this remarkable woman. Highly recommended.



Product Description



The third of six books in the epic historical novel covering the entire life of Hatshepsut, the ancient Egyptian queen who was crowned king and for more than twenty years ruled on the Horus Throne of the Living as the Female Falcon, Maatkare.



Before becoming Pharaoh, Hatshepsut served as God’s Wife of Amun, an important economic and spiritual office created by her grandfather that holds the key to her mysterious and unprecedented power. Maatkare was not only a charismatic political leader, she was a mystic who inspired the wholehearted devotion of brilliant men. One of them was Senmut, a commoner she elevated to unparalleled heights of authority. But her most influential advocate was Hapuseneb, the High Priest of Amun and the Governor of the South. Hapuseneb served under three pharaohs and yet only Maatkare is represented in his tomb.



Hatshepsut’s life is a passionate story of love—for her beliefs, her country and two of its most fascinating men.



Next in the Series: Mistress of the Two Lands – Book Four



The complete epic novel: “Truth is the Soul of the Sun – A Biographical Novel of Hatshepsut-Maatkare” also available as an e-book and as a trade paperback from amazon. com.

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