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	<title><![CDATA[PaulWNash]]></title>
	<link>https://hearthis.at/paulwnash-ve/</link>
	<language>en-EN</language>
	<copyright><![CDATA[]]></copyright>
	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Podcast of PaulWNash]]></itunes:subtitle>
	<itunes:author><![CDATA[PaulWNash]]></itunes:author>
	<googleplay:author><![CDATA[PaulWNash]]></googleplay:author>
	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[I am a songwriter and founder member of two obscure bands, Lyrian (progressive roks) and The Blossom (folk). ]]></itunes:summary>
	<googleplay:description><![CDATA[I am a songwriter and founder member of two obscure bands, Lyrian (progressive roks) and The Blossom (folk). ]]></googleplay:description>
	<description><![CDATA[I am a songwriter and founder member of two obscure bands, Lyrian (progressive roks) and The Blossom (folk). ]]></description>
	<itunes:owner>
	<itunes:name><![CDATA[PaulWNash]]></itunes:name>
	<itunes:email>contact@hearthis.at</itunes:email>
	</itunes:owner>
	<googleplay:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/6/3/3/_/uploads/8946192/image_user/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1509186336.jpg"/>
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    <googleplay:owner>contact@hearthis.at</googleplay:owner>
	<image>
      <link>https://hearthis.at/paulwnash-ve/</link>
      <title>PaulWNash</title>
      <url>https://img.hearthis.at/6/3/3/_/uploads/8946192/image_user/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1509186336.jpg</url>
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	<itunes:keywords><![CDATA[]]></itunes:keywords>
	
	
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Evagor]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/paulwnash-ve/evagor3-at5/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[PaulWNash]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[Evagor. A story of chivalry and magic, written for the fiftieth birthday of a famous entomologist.]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[Evagor. A story of chivalry and magic, written for the fiftieth birthday of a famous entomologist.]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Evagor. A story of chivalry and magic, written for the fiftieth birthday of a famous entomologist.]]></itunes:summary>
            <itunes:image href="https://img.hearthis.at/5/6/0/_/uploads/8946192/image_track/1656787/w1400_h1400_q70_ptrue_v2_----cropped_1512171065.jpg" />
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            <guid isPermaLink="false">1656787</guid>
            <category><![CDATA[Sounds]]></category>
            <googleplay:explicit>no</googleplay:explicit>
            <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
            
            
            
                <pubDate>Mon, 09 May 2016 23:20:00 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2016-05-09T23:20:00+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>26:36</itunes:duration>
        </item>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[The Nightingale and the Rose]]></title>
            <link>https://hearthis.at/paulwnash-ve/rose3/</link>
            <itunes:author><![CDATA[PaulWNash]]></itunes:author>
            <description><![CDATA[A song based on Oscar Wilde's fairy-tale "The Nightingale and the Rose". Written for Saint Valentine's Day 2017, and suitably romantic ...  Here are the lyrics:<br />
<br />
THE NIGHTINGALE AND THE ROSE<br />
<br />
Chapter 1: The three rose-trees <br />
<br />
‘I have read all the wise men have written<br />
And the secrets of death are mine<br />
For want of one red rose<br />
Despair and my heart entwine<br />
<br />
For she would dance with me<br />
Make joys of my woes<br />
For one red rose – but in<br />
My garden not one grows’<br />
<br />
The nightingale had heard his song<br />
And knew his love was true<br />
More precious than fine pearls or gold<br />
So through the grove she flew<br />
And sped apace to seek the place<br />
In which a red rose grew <br />
<br />
A splendid rose-tree grew within<br />
The garden’s central bed<br />
But when the nightingale enquired<br />
The rose-tree shook its head<br />
‘My blooms are white as snow, as bright<br />
As ancient bones’ it said<br />
The nightingale flew on her way<br />
To seek the rose of red<br />
<br />
Round the old sundial a second rose-tree<br />
Like a vine round an ancient tomb<br />
But when the nightingale<br />
Begged for a scarlet bloom<br />
<br />
The rose-tree shook its head<br />
‘My blossoms are gold,<br />
Bright as the mermaid’s hair<br />
Or crowns of the queens of old’<br />
<br />
A third old rose-briar grew beneath <br />
The student’s window-sill<br />
‘My flowers are red’ it said, ‘But frost<br />
Has touched my heart, I will<br />
Not bear a flower this year, my power <br />
To bloom lies cold and still’<br />
The nightingale begged with her song<br />
With all her curious skill<br />
<br />
Chapter 2: The creaking of the briar<br />
<br />
From the creaking of the briar there came an answer<br />
‘There’s a way a rose is made<br />
It is terrible to tell, I dare not tell it’<br />
Said the bird ‘I am not afraid’<br />
‘You must build it out of song by moonlight<br />
Give your heart’s blood for its scarlet shade’<br />
<br />
‘You must sing to me all night beneath the moonlight<br />
And a thorn must pierce your heart<br />
And your blood must fill my veins and turn to my blood’ <br />
She said ‘I will play my part’<br />
For she reasoned that her life was less than Love<br />
And she must serve its higher art<br />
<br />
So she told the student all<br />
And she asked him to be brave<br />
And she asked him to be true<br />
To revere the blood she gave<br />
But he could not comprehend<br />
The language of the birds<br />
For he only knew of books<br />
So he could not comprehend<br />
The nightingale’s, the nightingale’s, <br />
The nightingale’s sweet words<br />
<br />
Chapter 3: The nightingale’s first song<br />
<br />
But the oaktree understood<br />
And felt a sadness in his breast<br />
The nightingale had roosted there <br />
And in his branches built her nest<br />
‘Sing me a final song to ease<br />
‘My loneliness’ was his request<br />
<br />
The student took a notebook from his pocket, listening, leaning<br />
Against the oaktree, wondering what this song had to impart<br />
‘She conjures beauty, but that beauty all is show and preening<br />
She is an artist and has only cobwebs in her heart<br />
For everybody knows the arts are selfish, without meaning<br />
She would not sacrifice herself and only loves her art’<br />
<br />
Chapter 4: The nightingale’s last song <br />
<br />
The moon came up<br />
And the nightingale came to the barren briar<br />
<br />
She set her breast against a thorn and sighed and sang<br />
She sang of love between the gods and soon there sprang<br />
A bud upon the topmost spray, that spread into a flower<br />
And petal followed petal, as hour followed hour<br />
<br />
She sang a summer song of joy – the moon leaned down<br />
And wept to hear – the oak-tree shook his emerald gown<br />
And all the while the rose unfurled upon the highest bough<br />
But pale it was as moonlight or a marble cupid’s brow  <br />
<br />
All night she sang and the thorn pricked deeper<br />
While the rose swelled, pearl-like in its pale attire <br />
‘You must sing more sweetly and wake every sleeper<br />
‘You must press closer’ cried the briar<br />
<br />
And so the nightingale’s song swelled, more sweet and fierce <br />
She pressed her breast upon the thorn and felt it pierce<br />
And soon the rose began to show a vein of pinkish fire<br />
Within its growing petals – ‘Press closer’ cried the briar<br />
<br />
She sang and, as song followed song, the rose waxed red<br />
‘Press closer, little nightingale’ the old briar said<br />
‘I fear the dawn may break before the rose is quite complete<br />
Press closer, still closer – and make your music sweet’<br />
<br />
With one last burst her sweet song had ended<br />
The scarlet rose was done, the moon grew pale and grave<br />
And lingered through dawn as the last notes ascended<br />
And Echo bore them to her cave<br />
<br />
The briar cried ‘See how the rose is completed’ <br />
But the nightingale had no words to impart<br />
She lay in the grass as the darkness retreated <br />
The thorn embedded in her heart<br />
<br />
Chapter 5: Madelaine<br />
<br />
Madelaine danced in his arms<br />
In dreams she pressed against his breast<br />
And when the student woke he found<br />
He could not work, he could not rest<br />
All he knew was her name<br />
<br />
Noon came and the student threw<br />
His window wide and gasped to see<br />
The moon still sailing in the sky<br />
The rose upon the barren tree<br />
<br />
Dextrously he plucked the rose<br />
‘Its beauty puts the moon to shame!<br />
What luck! So strange and fair a flower<br />
Must have a complex Latin name<br />
I shall bear it to her’<br />
<br />
So the student took the rose and hastened to the <br />
Villa of his professor<br />
There he found his Madelaine upon the threshhold<br />
Comb and glass in her silvery hands <br />
‘Here,’ he cried, ‘the rose you craved, the finest rose, all <br />
other roses are lesser!<br />
You must wear it, near your heart, and as you promised<br />
We shall dance through enchanted lands’<br />
<br />
‘It will not go with my dress’ she swore<br />
‘I recall no promise, and now I own <br />
Many jewels, real jewels, which the Town Clark’s son<br />
Has pressed into my hands – flowers cannot compete<br />
<br />
For everyone knows that jewels cost more<br />
Than the finest rose – you must dance alone’<br />
‘You are cruel, ungrateful, for all I’ve done!’<br />
Cried the student and threw the rose into the street<br />
<br />
‘How foolish love is’ cried the student<br />
A wheel crushed the rose where it lay<br />
‘Its fallacious, erroneous, imprudent<br />
I have wasted my wisdom this day<br />
<br />
I’ll return to research and to reason<br />
My books, for it’s Truth that I crave’<br />
And from that day he studied, each season<br />
Found him toiling as scholarship’s slave<br />
<br />
Chapter 6: Postscript<br />
<br />
And so the story ended<br />
But what the writer left unsaid<br />
Was that the student, Marius<br />
Who followed Ariadne’s thread<br />
Never once forgot his sweetheart<br />
And the image of her face<br />
Came before him quite unbidden<br />
Then he’d pause and keep his place<br />
In the works of Avicenna<br />
Aristotle, Plato, Paine<br />
With one finger while he lingered<br />
In his dreams of Madelaine<br />
<br />
He reached towards the top shelf<br />
To grasp a great Socratic book<br />
And something in the tooling<br />
Upon the spine recalled the look<br />
Of her golden hair where it curled<br />
By her ear, upon her cheek<br />
And he sighed and paused a moment<br />
While he quite forgot the Greek<br />
And imagined Madelaine and<br />
He were dancing to a waltz<br />
Then she faded and his thoughts came<br />
Back to Crito and its faults <br />
<br />
The years passed and the student<br />
Wrote many books and wore the crowns<br />
Of laurels of the learned <br />
Societies of Europe’s towns <br />
At the age of eighty-seven<br />
On his death-bed he asked for<br />
His own Observations on the <br />
Organon to read once more<br />
<br />
But as he leafed through the pages <br />
It was Madelaine who filled his thoughts<br />
He imagined her his sweet love<br />
Though he knew her heart was hard as quartz<br />
And he felt a pang of sorrow<br />
And he let his Observations fall<br />
‘Oh if only she had loved me<br />
For the rose I gave her for the ball’<br />
And as his last breath escaped his breast<br />
He began to ask what magic might<br />
Six decades before have left him blessed<br />
By a wondrous rose that grew by night<br />
By a wondrous rose that grew by night ...<br />
<br />
]]></description>
            <googleplay:description><![CDATA[A song based on Oscar Wilde's fairy-tale "The Nightingale and the Rose". Written for Saint Valentine's Day 2017, and suitably romantic ...  Here are the lyrics:<br />
<br />
THE NIGHTINGALE AND THE ROSE<br />
<br />
Chapter 1: The three rose-trees <br />
<br />
‘I have read all the wise men have written<br />
And the secrets of death are mine<br />
For want of one red rose<br />
Despair and my heart entwine<br />
<br />
For she would dance with me<br />
Make joys of my woes<br />
For one red rose – but in<br />
My garden not one grows’<br />
<br />
The nightingale had heard his song<br />
And knew his love was true<br />
More precious than fine pearls or gold<br />
So through the grove she flew<br />
And sped apace to seek the place<br />
In which a red rose grew <br />
<br />
A splendid rose-tree grew within<br />
The garden’s central bed<br />
But when the nightingale enquired<br />
The rose-tree shook its head<br />
‘My blooms are white as snow, as bright<br />
As ancient bones’ it said<br />
The nightingale flew on her way<br />
To seek the rose of red<br />
<br />
Round the old sundial a second rose-tree<br />
Like a vine round an ancient tomb<br />
But when the nightingale<br />
Begged for a scarlet bloom<br />
<br />
The rose-tree shook its head<br />
‘My blossoms are gold,<br />
Bright as the mermaid’s hair<br />
Or crowns of the queens of old’<br />
<br />
A third old rose-briar grew beneath <br />
The student’s window-sill<br />
‘My flowers are red’ it said, ‘But frost<br />
Has touched my heart, I will<br />
Not bear a flower this year, my power <br />
To bloom lies cold and still’<br />
The nightingale begged with her song<br />
With all her curious skill<br />
<br />
Chapter 2: The creaking of the briar<br />
<br />
From the creaking of the briar there came an answer<br />
‘There’s a way a rose is made<br />
It is terrible to tell, I dare not tell it’<br />
Said the bird ‘I am not afraid’<br />
‘You must build it out of song by moonlight<br />
Give your heart’s blood for its scarlet shade’<br />
<br />
‘You must sing to me all night beneath the moonlight<br />
And a thorn must pierce your heart<br />
And your blood must fill my veins and turn to my blood’ <br />
She said ‘I will play my part’<br />
For she reasoned that her life was less than Love<br />
And she must serve its higher art<br />
<br />
So she told the student all<br />
And she asked him to be brave<br />
And she asked him to be true<br />
To revere the blood she gave<br />
But he could not comprehend<br />
The language of the birds<br />
For he only knew of books<br />
So he could not comprehend<br />
The nightingale’s, the nightingale’s, <br />
The nightingale’s sweet words<br />
<br />
Chapter 3: The nightingale’s first song<br />
<br />
But the oaktree understood<br />
And felt a sadness in his breast<br />
The nightingale had roosted there <br />
And in his branches built her nest<br />
‘Sing me a final song to ease<br />
‘My loneliness’ was his request<br />
<br />
The student took a notebook from his pocket, listening, leaning<br />
Against the oaktree, wondering what this song had to impart<br />
‘She conjures beauty, but that beauty all is show and preening<br />
She is an artist and has only cobwebs in her heart<br />
For everybody knows the arts are selfish, without meaning<br />
She would not sacrifice herself and only loves her art’<br />
<br />
Chapter 4: The nightingale’s last song <br />
<br />
The moon came up<br />
And the nightingale came to the barren briar<br />
<br />
She set her breast against a thorn and sighed and sang<br />
She sang of love between the gods and soon there sprang<br />
A bud upon the topmost spray, that spread into a flower<br />
And petal followed petal, as hour followed hour<br />
<br />
She sang a summer song of joy – the moon leaned down<br />
And wept to hear – the oak-tree shook his emerald gown<br />
And all the while the rose unfurled upon the highest bough<br />
But pale it was as moonlight or a marble cupid’s brow  <br />
<br />
All night she sang and the thorn pricked deeper<br />
While the rose swelled, pearl-like in its pale attire <br />
‘You must sing more sweetly and wake every sleeper<br />
‘You must press closer’ cried the briar<br />
<br />
And so the nightingale’s song swelled, more sweet and fierce <br />
She pressed her breast upon the thorn and felt it pierce<br />
And soon the rose began to show a vein of pinkish fire<br />
Within its growing petals – ‘Press closer’ cried the briar<br />
<br />
She sang and, as song followed song, the rose waxed red<br />
‘Press closer, little nightingale’ the old briar said<br />
‘I fear the dawn may break before the rose is quite complete<br />
Press closer, still closer – and make your music sweet’<br />
<br />
With one last burst her sweet song had ended<br />
The scarlet rose was done, the moon grew pale and grave<br />
And lingered through dawn as the last notes ascended<br />
And Echo bore them to her cave<br />
<br />
The briar cried ‘See how the rose is completed’ <br />
But the nightingale had no words to impart<br />
She lay in the grass as the darkness retreated <br />
The thorn embedded in her heart<br />
<br />
Chapter 5: Madelaine<br />
<br />
Madelaine danced in his arms<br />
In dreams she pressed against his breast<br />
And when the student woke he found<br />
He could not work, he could not rest<br />
All he knew was her name<br />
<br />
Noon came and the student threw<br />
His window wide and gasped to see<br />
The moon still sailing in the sky<br />
The rose upon the barren tree<br />
<br />
Dextrously he plucked the rose<br />
‘Its beauty puts the moon to shame!<br />
What luck! So strange and fair a flower<br />
Must have a complex Latin name<br />
I shall bear it to her’<br />
<br />
So the student took the rose and hastened to the <br />
Villa of his professor<br />
There he found his Madelaine upon the threshhold<br />
Comb and glass in her silvery hands <br />
‘Here,’ he cried, ‘the rose you craved, the finest rose, all <br />
other roses are lesser!<br />
You must wear it, near your heart, and as you promised<br />
We shall dance through enchanted lands’<br />
<br />
‘It will not go with my dress’ she swore<br />
‘I recall no promise, and now I own <br />
Many jewels, real jewels, which the Town Clark’s son<br />
Has pressed into my hands – flowers cannot compete<br />
<br />
For everyone knows that jewels cost more<br />
Than the finest rose – you must dance alone’<br />
‘You are cruel, ungrateful, for all I’ve done!’<br />
Cried the student and threw the rose into the street<br />
<br />
‘How foolish love is’ cried the student<br />
A wheel crushed the rose where it lay<br />
‘Its fallacious, erroneous, imprudent<br />
I have wasted my wisdom this day<br />
<br />
I’ll return to research and to reason<br />
My books, for it’s Truth that I crave’<br />
And from that day he studied, each season<br />
Found him toiling as scholarship’s slave<br />
<br />
Chapter 6: Postscript<br />
<br />
And so the story ended<br />
But what the writer left unsaid<br />
Was that the student, Marius<br />
Who followed Ariadne’s thread<br />
Never once forgot his sweetheart<br />
And the image of her face<br />
Came before him quite unbidden<br />
Then he’d pause and keep his place<br />
In the works of Avicenna<br />
Aristotle, Plato, Paine<br />
With one finger while he lingered<br />
In his dreams of Madelaine<br />
<br />
He reached towards the top shelf<br />
To grasp a great Socratic book<br />
And something in the tooling<br />
Upon the spine recalled the look<br />
Of her golden hair where it curled<br />
By her ear, upon her cheek<br />
And he sighed and paused a moment<br />
While he quite forgot the Greek<br />
And imagined Madelaine and<br />
He were dancing to a waltz<br />
Then she faded and his thoughts came<br />
Back to Crito and its faults <br />
<br />
The years passed and the student<br />
Wrote many books and wore the crowns<br />
Of laurels of the learned <br />
Societies of Europe’s towns <br />
At the age of eighty-seven<br />
On his death-bed he asked for<br />
His own Observations on the <br />
Organon to read once more<br />
<br />
But as he leafed through the pages <br />
It was Madelaine who filled his thoughts<br />
He imagined her his sweet love<br />
Though he knew her heart was hard as quartz<br />
And he felt a pang of sorrow<br />
And he let his Observations fall<br />
‘Oh if only she had loved me<br />
For the rose I gave her for the ball’<br />
And as his last breath escaped his breast<br />
He began to ask what magic might<br />
Six decades before have left him blessed<br />
By a wondrous rose that grew by night<br />
By a wondrous rose that grew by night ...<br />
<br />
]]></googleplay:description>
            <itunes:summary><![CDATA[A song based on Oscar Wilde's fairy-tale "The Nightingale and the Rose". Written for Saint Valentine's Day 2017, and suitably romantic ...  Here are the lyrics:

THE NIGHTINGALE AND THE ROSE

Chapter 1: The three rose-trees 

‘I have read all the wise men have written
And the secrets of death are mine
For want of one red rose
Despair and my heart entwine

For she would dance with me
Make joys of my woes
For one red rose – but in
My garden not one grows’

The nightingale had heard his song
And knew his love was true
More precious than fine pearls or gold
So through the grove she flew
And sped apace to seek the place
In which a red rose grew 

A splendid rose-tree grew within
The garden’s central bed
But when the nightingale enquired
The rose-tree shook its head
‘My blooms are white as snow, as bright
As ancient bones’ it said
The nightingale flew on her way
To seek the rose of red

Round the old sundial a second rose-tree
Like a vine round an ancient tomb
But when the nightingale
Begged for a scarlet bloom

The rose-tree shook its head
‘My blossoms are gold,
Bright as the mermaid’s hair
Or crowns of the queens of old’

A third old rose-briar grew beneath 
The student’s window-sill
‘My flowers are red’ it said, ‘But frost
Has touched my heart, I will
Not bear a flower this year, my power 
To bloom lies cold and still’
The nightingale begged with her song
With all her curious skill

Chapter 2: The creaking of the briar

From the creaking of the briar there came an answer
‘There’s a way a rose is made
It is terrible to tell, I dare not tell it’
Said the bird ‘I am not afraid’
‘You must build it out of song by moonlight
Give your heart’s blood for its scarlet shade’

‘You must sing to me all night beneath the moonlight
And a thorn must pierce your heart
And your blood must fill my veins and turn to my blood’ 
She said ‘I will play my part’
For she reasoned that her life was less than Love
And she must serve its higher art

So she told the student all
And she asked him to be brave
And she asked him to be true
To revere the blood she gave
But he could not comprehend
The language of the birds
For he only knew of books
So he could not comprehend
The nightingale’s, the nightingale’s, 
The nightingale’s sweet words

Chapter 3: The nightingale’s first song

But the oaktree understood
And felt a sadness in his breast
The nightingale had roosted there 
And in his branches built her nest
‘Sing me a final song to ease
‘My loneliness’ was his request

The student took a notebook from his pocket, listening, leaning
Against the oaktree, wondering what this song had to impart
‘She conjures beauty, but that beauty all is show and preening
She is an artist and has only cobwebs in her heart
For everybody knows the arts are selfish, without meaning
She would not sacrifice herself and only loves her art’

Chapter 4: The nightingale’s last song 

The moon came up
And the nightingale came to the barren briar

She set her breast against a thorn and sighed and sang
She sang of love between the gods and soon there sprang
A bud upon the topmost spray, that spread into a flower
And petal followed petal, as hour followed hour

She sang a summer song of joy – the moon leaned down
And wept to hear – the oak-tree shook his emerald gown
And all the while the rose unfurled upon the highest bough
But pale it was as moonlight or a marble cupid’s brow  

All night she sang and the thorn pricked deeper
While the rose swelled, pearl-like in its pale attire 
‘You must sing more sweetly and wake every sleeper
‘You must press closer’ cried the briar

And so the nightingale’s song swelled, more sweet and fierce 
She pressed her breast upon the thorn and felt it pierce
And soon the rose began to show a vein of pinkish fire
Within its growing petals – ‘Press closer’ cried ]]></itunes:summary>
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                <pubDate>Sat, 28 Oct 2017 20:27:11 +0200</pubDate>
                
                <atom:updated>2017-10-28T20:27:11+02:00</atom:updated>
                
            
            
            <itunes:duration>33:51</itunes:duration>
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