
We shall join together in this taste of bread and wine.Īnd we will have us twice as much of love and everythingĪnd the list goes on. We will remain together in the endless line of hours. We will remain joined until the end of years. Like having dates swimming in my honey wine. To love you is like having a luscious fruit ripening in my hand,

Now you can cross oceans, you will not leave me,Ī void like the silent shell on the shore.Įncompass them all with your love and mine, Opened doors to new worlds, beneath new suns which know no settings, You have crossed boundaries that encase me, enclose me, You have traveled further into me, with me, The ‘…’ will show where there is a part of the poem missing. Some of the poems are not complete, mainly because in full they would take up quite a bit of space. Now, before we begin, I feel it is best I warn you: this is going to be a mix of modern and older African poetry. But this article will be about the poems, the next will cover the proverbs. Remember dear reader, that you do not have to be female to include a poem in your vows. Now, with that in mind, I’m going to provide two options: poems or proverbs both of African origin. But what with the variation in taste, what one person finds a good description of their emotions is what you can see as utterly flat or too pretentious. So obviously, the fact that you are getting married to the guy means

#Style wax poetic how to#
Interesting way of phrasing things, is it not? But at least it gives us an idea of how to pick what we want to use to bring a certain loved one to tears (if that is your kind of thing I find suspiciously bright eyes enough for me): emotion thought words. “Poetry is when an emotion has found its thought and the thought has found words.” –Robert Frost Heh, as I’m writing this I have to admit I wish I were there to see how some of you dear readers would react to some of the poetry I am about to unleash, and see which you would prefer which ones would make your heart stop.
