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Eduardo Woodward

How to Choose a Memorial Poem Or Verse For a Funeral Or Life Celebration - 0 views

love poems for him funeral memorial service poem

started by Eduardo Woodward on 10 Apr 12
  • Eduardo Woodward
     

    There is absolutely unbroken continuity.

    Why should I be out of mind because I am

    Out of sight? I am but waiting for you

    For an interval

    Somewhere very near

    Just around the corner.

    All is well.

    Canon Henry Scott Holland (1847-1918)

    I turn my head and look towards death now.

    Feeling my way through the tunnel with the space of

    emptiness and quiet.

    The shimmering silence that awaits me.

    This is my direction now; inward to the green pastures...

    The cares of the world concern me no longer.

    I have completed this life. My work is done, my

    children grown.

    My husband is well on his hero's journey.

    I have loved much and well...

    Those I leave behind, I love.

    I hope I will remain in their hearts as they will

    in mine...

    Thank you for taking such good care of me...

    And all of you who have been my friends, thank you

    for teaching me about love.

    Karen Vervaet from "Karen's Journal, 3 April 1993

    In closing, memorial services and life celebrations are about the person that was lost and the life that they lived. The poem was called "Handsome Nell" and was about his first love for a girl named Nellie Blair. Throughout his life, Burns was a charming and witty man, attracting the attention of numerous women. A dozen or more women can be identified as the inspiration for various poems. Burns wrote many famous love poems, including "A Red, Red Rose" and "One Fond Kiss."

    Here's an excerpt from "Handsome Nell."

    "O once I loved a bonnie lass,

    Aye, and I love her still;

    And whilst that virtue warms my breast,

    I'll love my handsome Nell."

    Burns, in a later comment on this poem, stated that he had "never had the least thought or inclination of turning poet till I got once heartily in love, and then rhyme and song were, in a manner, the spontaneous language of my heart."

    The Turning Point

    In 1786, at age 27, Robert Burns went through a major turning point in his life. He suffered a disappointing love affair with Jean Armour, who was pregnant with his twin sons. The local community and Armour's father were outraged by the affair and her father rejected Burns's offer of marriage.

    Dejected and depressed, Burns made plans to leave Scotland and sail to Jamaica in the West Indies. To finance the trip, Burns submitted a volume of his poetry for publication.

    The publication of 612 copies in a simple, unbound volume was called "Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect," also sometimes known as "The Kilmarnock Edition." The poems were well received in Edinburgh by socialites who were enchanted by the poems and amazed that a poor farmer could write so well.

    So, instead of planning his escape to a new world, Burns planned a trip to Edinburgh. His confident manner, ingratiating style, and his obvious wit and intelligence brought Burns popularity and admiration. Soon, a second publication of his work was executed in Edinburgh.

    The Growing Popularity

    During his stay in Edinburgh, Robert Burns met printer James Johnson, who planned a project to print all of the folk songs in Scotland. This project enthralled Burns and embarked upon a journey throughout Scotland to collect as many folk songs as possible. love poems for him, love poems, poems for him

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