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Anonymous Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

Writing in fifth progressions

What kind of grammatical structure must writing take for it to appear self indulgent, divine and akin to the circle of fifths in Baroque music? Do you think it's possible to write in such a way that your words and sentences leave a divine impression with the reader? The kind of divine exemplified in Vivaldi's music for example, particularly his fifth progressions? Fifth progressions sound divine, perfect and transcend the listener into a state of euphoria.

For example, there is a fifth progression in this music beginning at 2:45

  

Top answer

Anonymous Do you think it's possible to write in such a way that your words and sentences leave a divine impression with the reader? Absolutely. The poems of Rumi, the Songs of Solomon, verses in the Qur'an, romantic poetry of Shelly; all inspire higher levels of existence.

  • Anonymous Do you think it's possible to write in such a way that your words and sentences leave a divine impression with the reader?
  • Absolutely.
  • The poems of Rumi, the Songs of Solomon, verses in the Qur'an, romantic poetry of Shelly; all inspire higher levels of existence.
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2 Answers
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AnonymousDo you think it's possible to write in such a way that your words and sentences leave a divine impression with the reader?
Absolutely. The poems of Rumi, the Songs of Solomon, verses in the Qur'an, romantic poetry of Shelly; all inspire higher levels of existence.
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AnonymousDo you think it's possible to write in such a way that your words and sentences leave a divine impression with the reader?
I think it depends greatly on the sensibilities of the reader.

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