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  1. Oct 10, 2012 · From the 1961 film, "Twist Around The Clock" In this film Dion performs three songs, The Wanderer, Runaround Sue and The Majestic. The film's producers dust...

  2. The Wanderer (Dion song) " The Wanderer " is a song written by Ernie Maresca and originally recorded by Dion, released on his 1961 album, Runaround Sue. The song, with a 12-bar blues -base verse and an eight-bar bridge, tells the story of a travelling man and his many loves. The song is ranked number 243 on the Rolling Stone magazine's list of ...

  3. The Wanderer Lyrics: Oh well, I'm the type of guy who will never settle down / Where pretty girls are, well you know that I'm around / I kiss 'em and I love 'em cause to me they're all the same ...

  4. The wanderer is constantly reminded of his situation as soon as he starts to take comfort in what’s around him. The wanderer describes his companions as “swim[ming] away again.” This is a creative and thoughtful way of bringing in the seascape around the wanderer and merging it with his thoughts. Lines 54-68 familiar utterances.

  5. Aug 2, 2013 · Dion said of "The Wanderer":[1]At its roots, it's more than meets the eye. "The Wanderer" is black music filtered through an Italian neighborhood that comes ...

  6. The Wanderer at Wikisource. The Wanderer is an Old English poem preserved only in an anthology known as the Exeter Book, a manuscript dating from the late 10th century. It comprises 115 lines of alliterative verse. As is often the case with Anglo-Saxon verse, the composer and compiler are anonymous, and within the manuscript the poem is untitled.

  7. The Wanderer. “How often the lone-dweller anticipates some sign, this Measurer’s mercy — must always must— mind-caring, along the ocean’s windings, stirring rime-chill seas, hands as oars many long whiles, treading the tracks of exile— the way of the world an open book always.” (1–5) So spoke the earth-stepper, a memorial of ...

  8. The Wanderer Lyrics - I do not own the music Request songs below :D

  9. Apr 27, 2020 · The Wanderer is an Old English poem preserved in only one of the four major surviving Anglo-Saxon manuscripts, The Exeter Book, and whilst its basic structure and elegiac tone are widely agreed upon, the exact nature of the speech and number of speakers within the poem remain topics of some debate (see note 1).More generally, as with all Old English poetry, exactly how the piece would have ...

  10. The Wanderer’s lament, even in the voice of an outcast, upholds Anglo-Saxon tribal values, notably loyalty, generosity, courage, and physical strength. It reflects an overriding concern with the ...