Dorothy Parker. -:)
The poem "Go Lovely Rose" was written by Edmund Waller in around 1633. Waller was a prominent English poet during the 17th century.
Vinita Piyaratna has written: 'Go slowly lovely moon'
The poem is very simply understood other than the language it is worded in so I will simply reword it for you. Keep in mind that the speaker is a male and he is talking to a rose. Go, lovely rose, (an actual rose, not the name of the girl) Tell her, the girl who wastes her time and mine, (He is telling the rose to talk to her) So that she will know When I compare her to you (the rose), That she still appears sweet and fair. Tell her, the girl that is young And shy That if you (the rose) had grown In a desert with no people That you (the rose) would have died without ever being praised for your beauty. Hidden beauty is worth little: Tell her to come forth, Ignore her shyness so that her beauty can be desired And tell her not to blush as I admire her Then die (telling the rose to die in front of her) So that she will see that just as with all rare things The time of her sweetness and fairness Will be short lived
The song Where Do You Go To (My Lovely) was written by Peter Starstedt. It is about how Peter Starstedt fell in love with a woman he had met in Vienna in the year 1965.
Ken Lovely goes by Kennith "Ken" Lovely.
The duration of Happy Go Lovely is 1.62 hours.
One famous poem about death is "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night" by Dylan Thomas. This poem explores the idea of resisting death and fighting against its inevitability.
You could contact them to ask them to remove the poem but it may be too late if they have already posted the poem.
Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening by Robert Frost The woods are lovely dark and deep But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep.
Happy Go Lovely was created on 1951-03-06.
During ancient Egyptian times.
The poem that says "You have to go to bed by day" is written by Shel Silverstein. It appears in his poetry collection titled "A Light in the Attic."
The words for "To a Wild Rose" were written by Hermann Hagedorn to go with the piano piece. It was published in 1912 in "Poems and Ballads", with the subtitle "(For music by Edward MacDowell)." The setting of the poem is described as "The spirit of the master speaks in deep woods." The book "Poems and Ballads" is available in Google Books.