Thursday, November 21, 2013

Lovers are Strangers








Eyes will drift to the sky
In time
While arms keep holding tight







There's a party in full force
Still the guests
Can't help but watch the door







Expressing your uncertainties
Through years of anniversaries
Then five years down the line
You say, "She was never my type"






Lovers are strangers
There's nothing to discuss
Hearts will be faithful
While the truth is told to someone else

When you look off
Tell me who you really love





Fall comes by surprise
Looking into strange eyes
Like school kids who are not friends
In the streets they are oonnected









Huddling in the dark
The only number you call
Magic moments are not lost
They'll outlive all your doubts







Lovers are strangers
There's nothing to discuss
Hearts will be faithful
While the truth is told to someone else

When you look off
Tell me who you really love 

Chinawoman

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Shouldn't Have Closed My Eyes










Here with my head hung out the window 

I see what I left behind 

I would if I could turn back the sunrise 

To give it another try







It was a simple reaction 

I shouldn't have closed my eyes 








Caught like a deer wrapped up in car light 

I missed out on what was mine 

And with a fear that gripped me so tight 

I let it fall out of sight 

It was a pitiful reaction






I shouldn't have closed my eyes

Rue Royale

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

The void









When I looked at the streets
And when they looked at me
The void






The void could only stop being
When I....
when I looked at the streets








And when you were talking
When I tried to think
When I tried to think

The Raincoats

Monday, November 18, 2013

Nitesky









No one knows what it's like
You and me, you and I
Underneath the night sky
You and me, you and I








I get lost all the time
In my thoughts, in my mind
You come through like a light
In the dark, give me sight










If you let my soul out
You let my soul out
You let my soul out
It will come right back to you







If you let my soul out
You let my soul out
You let my soul out
It will come right back to you








I will come right back to you
Come right back
Come right back to you









No one sees what it's like
You and me, you and I
Never go, never hide
You and me, you and I







If you let my soul out
You let my soul out
You let my soul out
It will come right back to you







If you let my soul out
You let my soul out
You let my soul out
It will come right back to you

Robot Koch

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Lake Geneva










Lake Geneva or Lake Léman (French: Lac Léman, Le Léman, sometimes Lac de Genève, German: Genfersee) is a lake in Switzerland and France. 






It is one of the largest lakes in Western Europe. 59.53% 345.31 km2 (133.32 sq mi) of it comes under the jurisdiction of Switzerland (cantons of Vaud, Geneva, and Valais), and 40.47% 234.71 km2 (90.62 sq mi) underFrance (Haute-Savoie).






The first recorded name of the lake is Lacus Lemannus from Roman times; Lemannus comes from Ancient greek Limanos, Limènos Limne Λιμένος Λίμνη meaning port's lake; it became Lacus Lausonius, although this name was also used for a town or district on the lake, Lacus Losanetes and then the Lac de Lausanne in the Middle Ages.Following the rise of Geneva it became Lac de Genève (translated into English as Lake Geneva). 










In the 18th century, Lac Léman was revived in French and is the customary name in that language (except in the canton of Geneva). In contemporary English, the name Lake Geneva is predominant. 











Lake Geneva is divided into three parts because of its different reasons of formation (sedimentation, tectonic folding, glacial erosion):








  • Haut Lac (Upper Lake), the eastern part from the Rhone estuary to the line of Meillerie–Rivaz
  • Grand Lac (Large Lake), the largest and deepest basin with the lake's largest width
  • Petit Lac (Small Lake), the most south-west, narrower and less deep part from Yvoire–Promenthoux next Prangins to the exit in Geneva








According to the Swiss Federal Office of Topography, swisstopo, Lac de Genève designates that part of the Petit Lac, which lies within the cantonal borders of Geneva (excluding the cantonal exclave Céligny), so about from Versoix–Hermance to the Rhone outflow in Geneva.   [ source ]





Saturday, November 16, 2013

Let's Transact








Let's Transact







Always, when my sound becomes too free to keep
I forget to say I've snuck you into my stories, both told and not, all dangerous.
Tonight, I dress in black and order something dark like Bailey's and bourbons.
Something hard to forget. I know you'll show up, and if the time is right,
I'll pull one on you. That's what we all want, isn't it?









And you'll follow me around, asking, "What did you mean by that?"
It'll cost you dearly for me to tell. Perhaps a kiss or a bathroom encounter.







Perhaps a swearing of eternal adoration. Perhaps a replacement story to hold in my throat
As ammunition.

Algebra Suicide

Friday, November 15, 2013

Show me the face








Show me the face
Of the one I'll love
Cause I've run out
Of preconceived notions







Show me the face
Of the one I'll love
Cause I've satisfied
All my preconceived notions








Show me the face
Show me the face
Show me the face
That could break my heart next







All of the ones I dreamed
All of the ones I could conceive
Have spent the night with me
So show me the face

Chinawoman

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Olea europaea









olive, (Olea europaea; family Oleaceae), subtropical, broad-leaved, evergreen tree and its edible fruit. The tree, ranging in height from 3 to 12 metres (10 to 40 feet) or more, has numerous branches; its leaves, leathery and lance-shaped, are dark green above and silvery on the underside and are paired opposite each other on the twig. The wood is resistant to decay; if the top dies back, a new trunk will often arise from the roots. The tree’s beauty has been extolled for thousands of years. The edible olive was grown on the island of Crete about 3500 bc; the Semitic peoples apparently cultivated it as early as 3000 bc. Olive oil was prized for anointing the body in Greece during the time of Homer; and it was an important crop of the Romans c. 600 bc. Later, olive growing spread to all the countries bordering the Mediterranean.







Olive trees bloom in late spring; small, whitish flowers are borne in loose clusters in the axils of the leaves. Flowers are of two types: perfect, containing both male and female parts, which are capable of developing into the olive fruits; and male, which contain only the pollen-producing parts. The olive is wind-pollinated. Fruit setting in the olive is often erratic; in some areas, especially where irrigation and fertilization are not practiced, bearing in alternate years is the rule. The trees may set a heavy crop one year and not even bloom the next.








The olive fruit is classed botanically as a drupe, similar to the peach or plum. Within the stone are one or two seeds. Olives tend to have maximum oil content (about 20–30 percent of fresh weight) and greatest weight six to eight months after the blossoms appear. At that stage they are black and will continue to cling to the tree for several weeks. Fruits for oil extraction are allowed to mature, but, for processing as food, immature fruits are picked or shaken off the tree. Hundreds of named varieties of both types of olives, table and oil, are grown in warm climates. In California, olives such as the Mission variety are grown almost exclusively for table use. In Europe, olives such as the Picual, Nevadillo, and Morcal are grown mostly for oil.









Commercial olive production generally occurs in two belts around the world, between 30° and 45° N latitude and between 30° and 45° S, where the climatic requirements for growth and fruitfulness can be found. Olive varieties do not come true from seed. Seedlings generally produce inferior fruit and must be budded or grafted to one of the named varieties. Olives can be propagated by cuttings, either by hardwood cuttings set in the nursery row in the spring or by small, leafy cuttings rooted under mist sprays in a propagating frame. The trees start bearing in 4 to 8 years, but full production is not reached for 15 or 20 years.








Olives are grown mainly for the production of olive oil. Fresh, unprocessed olives are inedible because of their extreme bitterness resulting from a glucoside that can be neutralized by treatments with a dilute alkali such as lye. Salt applications also dispel some of the bitterness. The processed fruit may be eaten either ripe or green. The olive fruit and its oil are key elements in the cuisine of the Mediterranean and popular outside the region.









Olive oil is classified into five grades: (1) virgin, from first pressings that meet defined standards; (2) pure, or edible, a mixture of refined and virgin; (3) refined, or commercial, consisting of lampante from which acid, colour, and odour have been removed; (4) lampante, high-acid oil, named for its use as a lamp fuel, obtained from a second pressing of residual pulp with hot water (some inferior virgin oils are classed as lampante); (5) sulfide, extracted with solvents and refined repeatedly.









In the late 20th century, Spain and Italy were the world leaders in commercial olive production, with more than a quarter each of the world’s total followed by Greece, with more than a 10th. Other important olive-producing countries are Turkey, Tunisia, Morocco, Syria, and Portugal. Europe, with nearly 500 million olive trees, has more than three-quarters of the world’s cultivated olives, followed byAsia (about 13 percent).    [ source ]