Ever since I heard this song over the summer this year, it has meant a lot to me. This is a beautiful song, not only in its lyrics but musically as well. It is well worth a listen. Tired and worn from the patterns I've carved I will do better in the morning I'm afraid of who I'd be without you I will do better in the morning This beginning line is an introduction to Zach's feelings, this sense that he's in a cycle and is too afraid to leave it for the fear of what comes after. "I will do better in the morning" is a mantra he repeats throughout the song, one that I have said to myself time after time, making this a very personal song for me. It tells me that even though it may seem bad now, there's always a new light, a new day for things to be better. Twisting up smokes, I'm in control Til the fire burns out my miniature vacation But I'm always left with the taste in my mouth I will do better in the morning This is in reference to him smoking,...
We have recently discovered from a trusted source that our great King Duncan was brutally murdered in the night while staying at Macbeth's estate. We do not know the details yet, but two servants were murdered around the same time. Macbeth, the thane of Cawdor and Glamis, claims he killed them in revenge after he saw what they'd done to our beloved king. Unfortunately, this means we cannot get the details of the murder from these clearly guilty people. The heirs to the throne were spotted fleeing the Macbeth estate not long after the murder was discovered. Could it be a case of both regicide and patricide? Macbeth, whose estate the murder took place at (who's definitely not suspicious at all) took it in his stride and accepted the kingship bestowed upon him in the absence of Malcomb "with a heavy heart." Hopefully, his fate doesn't follow his predecessor's. That could never happen... right? The noble family of Macbeth has certainly had some highs and lows ...
CONTAINS SPOILERS I have started a new book for my book club: A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini. To be honest, I chose this book on a whim. I actually did judge a book by its cover (oh the horror!). However, this book is very well-written in that addicting way that you can only begrudgingly put it down. Khaled Hosseini intrigued me as an author because I know he's written award-winning books before, like The Kite Runner. I recognized the name on the cover from an excerpt we read in class, and I knew it was going to be a good book. However, what intrigued me the most about this book wasn't the author or even the quality of writing, but the topic. I went into this book essentially blind, expecting something quick and forgettable. Now, at about one hundred pages in, I can tell I will not forget it. As an avid reader, there is always a moment where you just know what the tone and the caliber of the novel will be. For me, this happened when Mariam found her mother...
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