The only trace of me on somebody's wall says: para para paradise. Could i have asked for more?...
On the desk i was using during the lectures in my university it was written: here we fought heavily against sleep but we were severely defeated. Not being born to be a hero i've stopped attending lectures from the third year...
A graffiti in Bucharest says: 'Look at the sky'. My best friend thinks it's the best wall message that one could possibly read. I guess he gets a bit nostalgic when he looks at the stars as well...
On a bench on Thames's river bank there is a plate with this text: 'everybody needs a place to think!' I haven't seen anyone sitting there...
In Timisoara, in different parts of the city someone wrote on houses walls: 'dear x, it's y, we met in z's pub. I'm in love with you and i can't find you. If you see this desperate message, please tell me how. I'll check everyday'.
There are answers underneath. Can't tell you if they're fake. But i find his attempt funny, honest and romantic. I really hope he succeeded...
I've heard that on a wall in Cairo it is written: Napoleon was here! Apparently beneath stays the answer: No, I wasn't!
In Paris there is a Wall of Love where 'i love you' is written in every language on the planet. A girl sent me a picture of her and that wall a long time ago. It was a nice gesture. Too bad she, like many others, wasn't even able to prove it in her native one...
There was a time when i would have engraved her name on the wall of my skin. A perpetual memory like in Memento. Luckily the end of that movie proved to me that even perpetual memories can be misleading so i've dropped the idea...
Presumably the walls of ancient Rome were filled with graffiti and funny drawings. The graffiti were usual gossips, news or simply cursings addressed to those in power. The cartoons tried to depict the graffiti's message. Protest or resistance or an exercise of humbleness. Who knows? But all Latin historians mention the usage of such popular techniques of sending a message. Rome probably fell when repainted walls remained white...
On the desk i was using during the lectures in my university it was written: here we fought heavily against sleep but we were severely defeated. Not being born to be a hero i've stopped attending lectures from the third year...
A graffiti in Bucharest says: 'Look at the sky'. My best friend thinks it's the best wall message that one could possibly read. I guess he gets a bit nostalgic when he looks at the stars as well...
On a bench on Thames's river bank there is a plate with this text: 'everybody needs a place to think!' I haven't seen anyone sitting there...
In Timisoara, in different parts of the city someone wrote on houses walls: 'dear x, it's y, we met in z's pub. I'm in love with you and i can't find you. If you see this desperate message, please tell me how. I'll check everyday'.
There are answers underneath. Can't tell you if they're fake. But i find his attempt funny, honest and romantic. I really hope he succeeded...
I've heard that on a wall in Cairo it is written: Napoleon was here! Apparently beneath stays the answer: No, I wasn't!
In Paris there is a Wall of Love where 'i love you' is written in every language on the planet. A girl sent me a picture of her and that wall a long time ago. It was a nice gesture. Too bad she, like many others, wasn't even able to prove it in her native one...
There was a time when i would have engraved her name on the wall of my skin. A perpetual memory like in Memento. Luckily the end of that movie proved to me that even perpetual memories can be misleading so i've dropped the idea...
Presumably the walls of ancient Rome were filled with graffiti and funny drawings. The graffiti were usual gossips, news or simply cursings addressed to those in power. The cartoons tried to depict the graffiti's message. Protest or resistance or an exercise of humbleness. Who knows? But all Latin historians mention the usage of such popular techniques of sending a message. Rome probably fell when repainted walls remained white...
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