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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/7074-Love-Eternal.html
Romance/Love: July 01, 2015 Issue [#7074]

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Romance/Love


 This week: Love Eternal
  Edited by: Aennaytte: Free & Wild in GoT
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  

Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

Hello romantically inclined readers and writers, I am Aennaytte: Free & Wild in GoT and I will be your guest editor for this issue.


Word from our sponsor

ASIN: 1542722411
Amazon's Price: $ 12.99


Letter from the editor


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Love Eternal


The face that launched a thousand ships


Was Helena's face really worth a ten-year war?


Many of you will be somewhat familiar with the story of the Trojan War. In a nutshell, it went like this:

The three goddesses Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite wanted Paris to decide which one of them was prettier. To get his vote, Aphrodite promised him the beautiful Helena for a bride. Paris accepted. He chose her to be the prettiest, kidnapped Helena and brought her to Troy. Turns out, Helena's husband King Menelaus was not okay with that. Long story short: Greeks spent the next ten years killing each other over access to Troy and Helena. In the end, it was a horse that won the war.

The remarkable thing about this story is that while it does tell mostly about the heroes involved (Achilles, Ajax, Odysseus) there is that purported love story that started it all.

And then backtracking a little more, it was pure vanity of the goddesses that started it all. To answer my own question "Was Helena's face really worth a ten-year war?" Yes, it was worth it. Ancient Greeks lived by the belief that the only way to be remembered after death was by their deeds in life. If it weren't for Helena, they would have found another reason to wage war. May as well let it be for romance.



Editor's Picks

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#2040838 by Not Available.

 "Within You, Without You"  (E)
Lost love is miraculously found again
#1510026 by BEAR

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#2038706 by Not Available.

 Crossing the Lines  (13+)
Political differences blurred, power absolute, populations angry. God appears for one man.
#1885568 by Daniel Curry

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#2046577 by Not Available.

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#2045455 by Not Available.

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#2045318 by Not Available.

FORUM
Jane Austen Meeting Place  (ASR)
A place to meet other members and write about what you love about Jane Austen.
#1992432 by Princess Megan Rose GOT Fox

FORUM
Matters of the Heart Forum - CLOSED  (13+)
A forum for discussing romance and/or posting completion of group tasks.
#2016466 by Lilith of House Martell

 
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Ask & Answer

Comments for my last Romance/Love newsletter "Love and Emotional Attraction.

Dandelion Man wrote: The Greeks have four words for love.
Storge, which is the love of family or those thrown together by circumstances.
Philia, sort of a BFF thing, enjoying the company of a best friend, sharing the same interests.
Eros, what most people mean when they say they are in love. It is the romantic side of love.
C. S. Lewis adds a variant that he terms Venus. It is the sexual side of love, to make love. Eros and Venus can exist together or be totally separate.
The fourth Greek word for love is Agape. It is an unconditional love, a willingness to do anything and everything for the one you love.
When you write about love keep these thoughts in mind. Not all love is the same.

That is some really good information. Thank you for being so thorough. I learned a new thing thanks to you stopping by in my newsletter and taking the time to reply. I love that about this site. We keep sharing knowledge with one another and become better writers for it.

monty31802 wrote: I agree with you, there can be times when there is no Romance but Love is still there. Good points.

Thank you for commenting and your agreement.


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