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Someone's Always Saying Goodbye lyrics Why do people fall in love And then end up crying Why do lovers walk away from themselves When their hearts are breaking Why does lovin sometimes never stay long Why does kissing this time mean youll be gone Why does gladness become sadness Things that I dont get Chorus: Someones always sayin goodbye I believe it hurts when we cry Dont we know partings never so easy And with all the achings inside I believe some hearts will survive Tryin hard to pretend that were gonna be fine I could never really love Someone else but you (No one else but you) I have never wanted anything else But a love so true But just like a dream that comes in the night In the morning you were out of my sight Turned away from me, sadly as I see Away from where I stand (Repeat Chorus) Adlib: (Repeat Chorus to fade)

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Someone's Always Saying Goodbye lyrics

Why do people fall in loveAnd then end up crying

Why do lovers walk away from themselvesWhen their hearts are breaking

Why does lovin sometimes never stay longWhy does kissing this time mean youll be gone

Why does gladness become sadnessThings that I dont get

Chorus:Someones always sayin goodbye

I believe it hurts when we cryDont we know partings never so easy

And with all the achings insideI believe some hearts will survive

Tryin hard to pretend that were gonna be fine

I could never really loveSomeone else but you(No one else but you)

I have never wanted anything elseBut a love so true

But just like a dream that comes in the nightIn the morning you were out of my sight

Turned away from me, sadly as I seeAway from where I stand

(Repeat Chorus)Adlib:

(Repeat Chorus to fade)

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The Little Prince Characters

Since the story of The Little Prince is written in the form of a fable, or allegory, the characters do not have names, but are rather "I" and "he." Others are generic: the astronomer, the geographer, the king, the businessman, the lamplighter, and so on. As in allegory, they represent one phase of human life. The king is authority; the lamplighter, devotion to duty; the businessman, greed. The flower is a coquettish woman, nevertheless beloved by the Prince; the serpent is death; the fox, true to his literary image, represents ruse. Most of the secondary characters appear only in brief scenes, in dialogue form, but their meaning is very clear.

The only characters that appear throughout the work are the narrator, who is lost in the Sahara, and the Little Prince. They are kindred spirits, both with the spirit of simplicity, a great love of human nature, and a desire for the ideal. The narrator as a child had drawn pictures misunderstood by adults, as the Prince does when he comes to earth. Both love the world beyond them; the narrator loves his plane because it brings him beyond himself to other regions on earth. The Prince gives up his life to return to his planet in another world, which he left in order to seek for friends. There is an immediate bond between the two, and between them and the reader. The author's illustrations, which accompany every edition, help to convey this warmth, but it is the immediacy of the characters which is most...

A card catalog is a physical listing of all of the contents of a library, organized with a single card for each item in the library. It was a familiar navigational hazard and blessing in all libraries well through the late 20th century, when physical catalogs began to be displaced by computerized versions. Some libraries have kept them, often as sentimental mementos, and a few actively maintain their listings, although this is most common in small, remote libraries.

The need to catalog books in some way has been present since they were invented. A good catalog enables people to know which publications a library has and where to find them, and many contain additional information that could be assistance to scholars. Early library catalogs were kept on scrolls or in ledgers, and they were often printed and distributed so that distant scholars could know which books a library had.

The concept of the card catalog was introduced in the 1800s, and it was a great help to scholars. These catalogs can be configured in a number of ways, and their organization makes it easy to add or remove books, and to find particular ones. Every time a new book enters a library, a card is created for it, with information like the title, author's name, subject, and location of the book.

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themes

Deceptively simple and apparently a story for children, The Little Prince addresses most major social concerns of Saint-Exupery's day and of modern times. The lack of childlike simplicity in a sophisticated and materialistic civilization is portrayed from the very first page, when the author shows a drawing of a boa snake that had eaten an elephant to uncomprehending adults, who believe it to be a hat. Adults, especially the materialistic generation, continue to judge by appearances; the Turkish astronomer who discovered B612, the Prince's planet, is rejected by the scientific community until he appears in Western clothes. Adults are enamored of statistics and numbers, and prefer to know how much money a person makes rather than know the sound of his voice. Such adults are reflected in the businessman who counts stars which he claims to own, to prove his wealth. Even the problem of drug addiction and alcoholism appears in the drunkard, who drinks to forget that he is ashamed to drink. The compartmentalization of knowledge, too prevalent in today's world, is evident in the geographer, who is not an explorer, and therefore cannot know what is really on the earth's surface. The world of authority and power comes to life in the king who considers everyone his subject, a universal image, but only too true in occupied France in 1943.

On the more positive side, Saint-Exupery shows the world of love within people, symbolized by the special flower chosen...

(The entire section is 421 words.)

What is card catalogue

A card catalog is a physical listing of all of the contents of a library, organized with a single card for each item in the library. It was a familiar navigational hazard and blessing in all libraries well through the late 20th century, when physical catalogs began to be displaced by computerized versions. Some libraries have kept them, often as sentimental mementos, and a few actively maintain their listings, although this is most common in small, remote libraries.

The need to catalog books in some way has been present since they were invented. A good catalog enables people to know which publications a library has and where to find them, and many contain additional information that could be assistance to scholars. Early library catalogs were kept on scrolls or in ledgers, and they were often printed and distributed so that distant scholars could know which books a library had.

The concept of the card catalog was introduced in the 1800s, and it was a great help to scholars. These catalogs can be configured in a number of ways, and their organization makes it easy to add or remove books, and to find particular ones. Every time a new book enters a library, a card is created for it, with information like the title, author's name, subject, and location of the book.

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