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Into Your Hands
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Groom
Into your hands I put my trust.
Into your heart I give my love.
Into your soul I offer my spirit.
Into your mind my words are free.
Bride
With all of your love I know am yours.
With all of your words, I know I'm secure.
With all of your kindness, at last I can give.
With all of your gentleness, I too can be there.
Together - bride and groom
I give you my heart, you give me your spirit.
I give you my soul, you give me your body.
I give you my love, you give me your love.
I give you my all, you give me freedom.
Groom
With you
I
Feel
Bride
With you
I
Want
Bide and groom
With you
I
Love
With you
I
Am |
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| Reader Comments |
| ZJYIFpPaDITJjSGdBFL |
| Name: oem software | 2012-02-11 |
| 9OtpMl It`s really useful! Looking through the Internet you can mostly observe watered down information, something like bla bla bla, but not here to my deep surprise. It makes me happy..!! |
| mkktQxYtbumZMPzyN |
| Name: Dylan | 2012-03-29 |
| In the early 20th century most plpeoe just wore their best clothes to a wedding. Even the bride often just wore her best clothes, or perhaps splashed out on a new suit or gown which afterwards would be worn for best ; only really rich brides had a white dress just for the wedding. The only plpeoe in the wedding party who might deliberately be dressed alike were the bridesmaids, and even this wasn't always done except by affluent plpeoe who could afford to buy frocks specially for this single occasion. Clothes were relatively far more expensive then than they are now. A new suit was a big investment, and unless you lived in a big city you were unlikely to have a wide choice perhaps the men's outfitters where these plpeoe lived only sold one style of suit and tie!Similarly, many of the rules about wedding etiquette, such as who stands where in photographs and so on, are inventions of the last half-century. As the custom of having a white wedding with bridesmaids and ushers etc. spread among plpeoe whose parents and grandparents didn't dream of such things, all the professionals the caterers, the photographers, the printers, etc, etc, etc. seized the opportunity to tell them how it ought to be done, and so a standard set of rules came into being. In the 1910s plpeoe didn't consult rulebooks; they did what came naturally, or what their family or social group had always done, so customs from group to group varied a great deal. |
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