she loved him so hard, so deep. He reached into the depths of her heart and deep into her soul. she was had searched for 52 years for her knight in shining armor. He was everything she dreamed of, charming, sweet, romantic, poetic. Then the day came when she found out about him. He toyed with her for 7 mos. He manipulated her, worked on her emotions, he drained all her energy to get him to love her, he said he did. he was a player, a user of women. he had many woman, while he had her on back burner, til he was ready to use her. she was so hurt, so broken hearted, she cried and cried, til her tears turned to anger. Her anger and pain turned her once love into hate. Well, to all men out there, if you have no interest in a woman, just let her be. playing with a woman's heart, soul, mind, and emotions, making her think she's the love of your life< and then for her to find out she's been decieved in the worst possible way, can be very dangerous for you men. It could backfire on you, and come back and bite you three fold. it has been 2 months now since i ended it. I am still feeling the effects of it. To all the ladies. Watch out for the players, the manipulators , especially when they start playing with your mind and emotions
No. This popular (and perhaps arguably true) phrase comes from dramatist William Congreve in his late 17'th century poem The Mourning Bride:...Heav'n has no Rage, like Love to Hatred turn'd,Nor Hell a Fury, like a Woman scorn'd.
Hatred does not last for very long. A person with hatred can be turned into a happy person easily.
This is the usual misquotation of a line from William Congreve's The Mourning Bride ( 1697): "Heaven has no rage like love to hatred turned/ Nor Hell a fury like a woman scorned, " which itself seems to derive from a line in act iv of Colley Cibber's Love's Last Shift (1696): "We shall find no fiend in hell can match the fury of a disappointed woman."
The feeling of hatred consumed him after he found out he had been betrayed by his closest friend.
It's from William Congreve's 1697 play The Mourning Bride, in which the third act ends with Zara saying "Thou shalt know, spite of thy past distress, and all those ills which thou so long hast mourned: heaven has no rage like love to hatred turned, nor hell a fury, like a woman scorned."
He had righteous anger. The Bible says he had never sinned in his lifetime. According to Jesus, hatred is a sin.
Dada.
Yes it does. It's called the 'Black Stone' When it first came from heaven it used to be white, but over time it absorbed sins and it turned Black.
This phrase, originating from a play by William Congreve, means that a woman's anger and vengeance can be intense and powerful when she has been wronged or treated badly by someone she trusted or loved. It serves as a warning that underestimating or betraying a woman's emotions can lead to severe consequences.
The scientific meaning for melt is when, a solid is turned into a liquid by melting the solid.
Simon Camden Did you know:As a child, Simon on "7th Heaven" was nicknamed "The Bank of Simon" by his siblings who turned to him for cash.
Vapor