one more cappuccino for the road
Re: one more cappuccino for the road
You do the yodeling parts quite well.
Re: one more cappuccino for the road
thank you, hartmut. is 'quite' as strong as 'very'?Hartmut wrote:You do the yodeling parts quite well.
- fishfishquaileye
- Posts: 546
- Joined: Sun Aug 21, 2011 11:11 pm
Re: one more cappuccino for the road
nice version, Geoffrey. As you are an expert on Bob Dylan music I wonder if I may ask you a question about one of his songs, "All I Really Want To Do"
As I examine the lyrics I come to the view that the word 'really' only serves to make one suspicious of a statement's credibility.
now you may well think that such an opinion is pedantic or childish, but please explain why Dylan needs to say any more than "All I Want To Do".
I ain't lookin' to compete with you
Beat or cheat or mistreat you
Simplify you, classify you
Deny, defy or crucify you
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
No, and I ain't lookin' to fight with you
Frighten you or tighten you
Drag you down or drain you down
Chain you down or bring you down
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
I ain't lookin' to block you up
Shock or knock or lock you up
Analyze you, categorize you
Finalize you or advertise you
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
I don't want to straight-face you
Race or chase you, track or trace you
Or disgrace you or displace you
Or define you or confine you
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
I don't want to meet your kin
Make you spin or do you in
Or select you or dissect you
Or inspect you or reject you
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
I don't want to fake you out
Take or shake or forsake you out
I ain't lookin' for you to feel like me
See like me or be like me
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
As I examine the lyrics I come to the view that the word 'really' only serves to make one suspicious of a statement's credibility.
now you may well think that such an opinion is pedantic or childish, but please explain why Dylan needs to say any more than "All I Want To Do".
I ain't lookin' to compete with you
Beat or cheat or mistreat you
Simplify you, classify you
Deny, defy or crucify you
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
No, and I ain't lookin' to fight with you
Frighten you or tighten you
Drag you down or drain you down
Chain you down or bring you down
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
I ain't lookin' to block you up
Shock or knock or lock you up
Analyze you, categorize you
Finalize you or advertise you
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
I don't want to straight-face you
Race or chase you, track or trace you
Or disgrace you or displace you
Or define you or confine you
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
I don't want to meet your kin
Make you spin or do you in
Or select you or dissect you
Or inspect you or reject you
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
I don't want to fake you out
Take or shake or forsake you out
I ain't lookin' for you to feel like me
See like me or be like me
All I really want to do
Is, baby, be friends with you.
AW: Re: one more cappuccino for the road
In this case: Yes.Geoffrey wrote: thank you, hartmut. is 'quite' as strong as 'very'?
Re: AW: Re: one more cappuccino for the road
i have entered your name into my little white bookHartmut wrote:In this case: Yes.Geoffrey wrote: thank you, hartmut. is 'quite' as strong as 'very'?

Re: one more cappuccino for the road
fishfishquaileye wrote:
>As you are an expert on Bob Dylan music . . .
Indeed, plus many other things.
>. . . I wonder if I may ask you a question about one of his songs, "All I Really Want To Do".
By all means.
>As I examine the lyrics I come to the view that the word 'really' only serves to make one suspicious of a statement's credibility.
Bravo. You are right to be suspicious. It is encouraging to know that my grooming of you has not been wasted.
>Now you may well think that such an opinion is pedantic or childish . . .
On the contrary; an alertness to what is unwittingly being communicated in everyday speech can give the listener a huge advantage when discerning fact from fiction.
>. . . but please explain why Dylan needs to say any more than "All I Want To Do".
He includes the word 'really' because he is lying. No red-blooded man wants merely to be friends with his 'baby'. What would be the point? He is gaining her confidence before the seduction; that is what men do. Bob Dylan is being false. Why do you think he sings that line in falsetto?
>As you are an expert on Bob Dylan music . . .
Indeed, plus many other things.
>. . . I wonder if I may ask you a question about one of his songs, "All I Really Want To Do".
By all means.
>As I examine the lyrics I come to the view that the word 'really' only serves to make one suspicious of a statement's credibility.
Bravo. You are right to be suspicious. It is encouraging to know that my grooming of you has not been wasted.
>Now you may well think that such an opinion is pedantic or childish . . .
On the contrary; an alertness to what is unwittingly being communicated in everyday speech can give the listener a huge advantage when discerning fact from fiction.
>. . . but please explain why Dylan needs to say any more than "All I Want To Do".
He includes the word 'really' because he is lying. No red-blooded man wants merely to be friends with his 'baby'. What would be the point? He is gaining her confidence before the seduction; that is what men do. Bob Dylan is being false. Why do you think he sings that line in falsetto?
AW: Re: AW: Re: one more cappuccino for the road
Thank you. (I hope that's a good thing ...)Geoffrey wrote: i have entered your name into my little white book
Re: one more cappuccino for the road
LOLOLOL... great analysis there, g
It is an awful lot of delineations to go through for 'just' a friend... wonder if he's leading up to the seduction or assuaging the rejection [the falsetto could make a bit of sense in that context, as well
]... some of that "methinks he doth" stuff. Don't have time to try to look for clues as to which, but am open to any you will find.

It is an awful lot of delineations to go through for 'just' a friend... wonder if he's leading up to the seduction or assuaging the rejection [the falsetto could make a bit of sense in that context, as well

"Be yourself. Everyone else is already taken."
~ Oscar Wilde
~ Oscar Wilde
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Re: one more cappuccino for the road
Geoffrey, you are in fine form these days.
It is such fun for us mere mortals to observe you and Fishie parrying and thrusting with your, er...rapiers.
It is such fun for us mere mortals to observe you and Fishie parrying and thrusting with your, er...rapiers.
Re: one more cappuccino for the road
well, for him it's like playing chess with a computer. he knows he cannot win, but benefits from the exercise. just imagine how the percentage of successful prosecutions would soar if a fellow possessing my knowledge of human behaviour were a member of a legal team.imaginary friend wrote:Geoffrey, you are in fine form these days. It is such fun for us mere mortals to observe you and Fishie parrying and thrusting with your, er...rapiers.
Re: one more cappuccino for the road
lizzytysh wrote:
. . . some of that "methinks he doth" stuff.
yessss - not only do you read the bard, you have the mind of a psychologist!!!!!x
. . . some of that "methinks he doth" stuff.
yessss - not only do you read the bard, you have the mind of a psychologist!!!!!x
- fishfishquaileye
- Posts: 546
- Joined: Sun Aug 21, 2011 11:11 pm
Re: one more cappuccino for the road
You mean if you acted for the defence, I presume. That's a heck of a confession by you, self-effacing, yet a brutally honest acceptance of your limitations and shortcomings. Admirable! My own view is let the ersatz win their cyber victories whilst the real warriors win in the Real World.Geoffrey wrote:just imagine how the percentage of successful prosecutions would soar if a fellow possessing my knowledge of human behaviour were a member of a legal team.imaginary friend wrote:Geoffrey, you are in fine form these days. It is such fun for us mere mortals to observe you and Fishie parrying and thrusting with your, er...rapiers.
Re: one more cappuccino for the road
Be careful not to confuse warriors with worriers. Now, 'the real world' is a concept with no clear definition. "Is this real life, or is it just fantasy?" - asked Freddy Mercury at the beginning of one of his songs. Shelley, in 'Adonais', claimed that when people die they awaken from the dream of life. Some psychologists believe a person with angst sees the real world more clearly than people who fool themselves in order to function. It is a complex issue, not made any easier by science (see the two CNN reports below).fishfishquaileye wrote:My own view is let the ersatz win their cyber victories whilst the real warriors win in the Real World.
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/TECH/innova ... =allsearch
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europ ... l?iref=NS1
"It's all just a dream, Babe" ['To Ramona' -Bob Dylan]