Quakers, or Friends, are members of the Religious Society of Friends, or Friends' Church—an international family of diverse Christian religious organizations that focus on the priesthood of all believers. Quakers today are theologically diverse: mostly regarded as Christian, they include those with evangelical, holiness, liberal and traditional Quaker understandings of Christianity. From the end of the 20th century, small but vocal groups of Friends with Christian atheist or universalist beliefs have emerged.
Quakers are organized into independent regional and national bodies called Yearly Meetings which often split from one another because of doctrinal differences. Several federations for Yearly Meetings unite Quakers who share similar beliefs—for example Evangelical Friends Church International which unites evangelical Christian Friends,; Friends United Meeting which unites Friends into "fellowships where Jesus Christ is known, loved and obeyed as Teacher and Lord"; and Friends General Conference links groups that have liberal beliefs. Many Yearly Meetings are also members of Friends World Committee for Consultation, a loose international federation of Yearly Meetings from the different traditions.
Plot
Army veterans, just mustered out of the service, are going to the one of the men's brothers ranch on their way West. Just as they arrive, Indians attack the ranch and kill the brother. The brother was killed because he was using faulty ammunition that did not fire. Buck Devlin, whose brother was killed, musters out of the service with pals John and Wilbur and vows to find the men responsible for the crime.
Keywords: 1870s, barfly, bartender, broken-lock, brother, buttermilk, church, church-congregation, church-service, corruption
He called himself the 'Preacher'...and he wrote his sermon in lead!
Plot
Army veterans, just mustered out of the service, are going to the one of the men's brothers ranch on their way West. Just as they arrive, Indians attack the ranch and kill the brother. The brother was killed because he was using faulty ammunition that did not fire. Buck Devlin, whose brother was killed, musters out of the service with pals John and Wilbur and vows to find the men responsible for the crime.
Keywords: 1870s, barfly, bartender, broken-lock, brother, buttermilk, church, church-congregation, church-service, corruption
He called himself the 'Preacher'...and he wrote his sermon in lead!
Plot
The story of a family of Quakers in Indiana in 1862. Their religous sect is strongly opposed to violence and war. It's not easy for them to meet the rules of their religion in everyday life but when Southern troops pass the area they are in real trouble. Should they fight, despite their peaceful attitide?
Keywords: 80-year-old, accordion, african-american, american-civil-war, anger, anti-slavery, anti-violence, arm-sling, arm-wound, attic
WHAT FUN YOU'LL HAVE...AND WHAT A FAMILY! YOU'LL FEEL AS IF YOU ARE A PART OF IT...OR WOULD LIKE TO BE! (re-release print ad - all caps)
You'll love SAMANTHA, THE GOOSE! (re-release print ad - all caps)
Try FRIENDLY PERSUASION: It's Powerful!
When You Looked At Jess Birdwell YOU LOOKED UP
Jess is a big man and he walks the Indiana earth in a big way... a man of few words and many strengths... a man born with the gift of laughter and the knack for love, a power for good, a man who doesn't hold with killing. But now Jess faces a big decision -- to keep faith with what he lives by -- or to fight for what he loves... Only so great a theme could make so great a motion picture!
Anthony Perkins, the most exciting screen discovery since James Dean!
Pat Boone, the sensational Dot Recording artist, can be heard singing the big hit title-song, "Friendly Persuasion"
Jess Birdwell: I'm just his father, Eliza, not his conscience. A man's life ain't worth a hill of beans except he lives up to his own conscience.
Prof. Waldo Quigley: I want you to know, sir, I honor your prejudices - -um, uh, convictions.
Josh Birdwell: I don't want to die. I don't think I could kill anyone if I tried. But I have to try, so long as other people have to.
Rebel soldier: Peach pie!::Little Jess Birdwell: It's rattlesnake pie.::Rebel soldier: Best rattlesnake pie *I* ever tasted.
Plot
The story of a family of Quakers in Indiana in 1862. Their religous sect is strongly opposed to violence and war. It's not easy for them to meet the rules of their religion in everyday life but when Southern troops pass the area they are in real trouble. Should they fight, despite their peaceful attitide?
Keywords: 80-year-old, accordion, african-american, american-civil-war, anger, anti-slavery, anti-violence, arm-sling, arm-wound, attic
WHAT FUN YOU'LL HAVE...AND WHAT A FAMILY! YOU'LL FEEL AS IF YOU ARE A PART OF IT...OR WOULD LIKE TO BE! (re-release print ad - all caps)
You'll love SAMANTHA, THE GOOSE! (re-release print ad - all caps)
Try FRIENDLY PERSUASION: It's Powerful!
When You Looked At Jess Birdwell YOU LOOKED UP
Jess is a big man and he walks the Indiana earth in a big way... a man of few words and many strengths... a man born with the gift of laughter and the knack for love, a power for good, a man who doesn't hold with killing. But now Jess faces a big decision -- to keep faith with what he lives by -- or to fight for what he loves... Only so great a theme could make so great a motion picture!
Anthony Perkins, the most exciting screen discovery since James Dean!
Pat Boone, the sensational Dot Recording artist, can be heard singing the big hit title-song, "Friendly Persuasion"
Jess Birdwell: I'm just his father, Eliza, not his conscience. A man's life ain't worth a hill of beans except he lives up to his own conscience.
Prof. Waldo Quigley: I want you to know, sir, I honor your prejudices - -um, uh, convictions.
Josh Birdwell: I don't want to die. I don't think I could kill anyone if I tried. But I have to try, so long as other people have to.
Rebel soldier: Peach pie!::Little Jess Birdwell: It's rattlesnake pie.::Rebel soldier: Best rattlesnake pie *I* ever tasted.
Plot
The story of a family of Quakers in Indiana in 1862. Their religous sect is strongly opposed to violence and war. It's not easy for them to meet the rules of their religion in everyday life but when Southern troops pass the area they are in real trouble. Should they fight, despite their peaceful attitide?
Keywords: 80-year-old, accordion, african-american, american-civil-war, anger, anti-slavery, anti-violence, arm-sling, arm-wound, attic
WHAT FUN YOU'LL HAVE...AND WHAT A FAMILY! YOU'LL FEEL AS IF YOU ARE A PART OF IT...OR WOULD LIKE TO BE! (re-release print ad - all caps)
You'll love SAMANTHA, THE GOOSE! (re-release print ad - all caps)
Try FRIENDLY PERSUASION: It's Powerful!
When You Looked At Jess Birdwell YOU LOOKED UP
Jess is a big man and he walks the Indiana earth in a big way... a man of few words and many strengths... a man born with the gift of laughter and the knack for love, a power for good, a man who doesn't hold with killing. But now Jess faces a big decision -- to keep faith with what he lives by -- or to fight for what he loves... Only so great a theme could make so great a motion picture!
Anthony Perkins, the most exciting screen discovery since James Dean!
Pat Boone, the sensational Dot Recording artist, can be heard singing the big hit title-song, "Friendly Persuasion"
Jess Birdwell: I'm just his father, Eliza, not his conscience. A man's life ain't worth a hill of beans except he lives up to his own conscience.
Prof. Waldo Quigley: I want you to know, sir, I honor your prejudices - -um, uh, convictions.
Josh Birdwell: I don't want to die. I don't think I could kill anyone if I tried. But I have to try, so long as other people have to.
Rebel soldier: Peach pie!::Little Jess Birdwell: It's rattlesnake pie.::Rebel soldier: Best rattlesnake pie *I* ever tasted.
Plot
The story of a family of Quakers in Indiana in 1862. Their religous sect is strongly opposed to violence and war. It's not easy for them to meet the rules of their religion in everyday life but when Southern troops pass the area they are in real trouble. Should they fight, despite their peaceful attitide?
Keywords: 80-year-old, accordion, african-american, american-civil-war, anger, anti-slavery, anti-violence, arm-sling, arm-wound, attic
WHAT FUN YOU'LL HAVE...AND WHAT A FAMILY! YOU'LL FEEL AS IF YOU ARE A PART OF IT...OR WOULD LIKE TO BE! (re-release print ad - all caps)
You'll love SAMANTHA, THE GOOSE! (re-release print ad - all caps)
Try FRIENDLY PERSUASION: It's Powerful!
When You Looked At Jess Birdwell YOU LOOKED UP
Jess is a big man and he walks the Indiana earth in a big way... a man of few words and many strengths... a man born with the gift of laughter and the knack for love, a power for good, a man who doesn't hold with killing. But now Jess faces a big decision -- to keep faith with what he lives by -- or to fight for what he loves... Only so great a theme could make so great a motion picture!
Anthony Perkins, the most exciting screen discovery since James Dean!
Pat Boone, the sensational Dot Recording artist, can be heard singing the big hit title-song, "Friendly Persuasion"
Jess Birdwell: I'm just his father, Eliza, not his conscience. A man's life ain't worth a hill of beans except he lives up to his own conscience.
Prof. Waldo Quigley: I want you to know, sir, I honor your prejudices - -um, uh, convictions.
Josh Birdwell: I don't want to die. I don't think I could kill anyone if I tried. But I have to try, so long as other people have to.
Rebel soldier: Peach pie!::Little Jess Birdwell: It's rattlesnake pie.::Rebel soldier: Best rattlesnake pie *I* ever tasted.
He lived only for revenge...She lived only for his love!
Territorial Marshal Wistful McClintock: You know, Quirt, I always figured on using a new rope when hangin' you... because I kind of respected ya. You never took the best of things and all your men went down looking at ya.
Quirt Evans: I thought you weren't allowed to work on Sunday.::Penelope Worth: Oh, Quirt, there's nothing we're not allowed to do. It's just that we don't believe in doing what we know is wrong.::Quirt Evans: Well, that makes it pretty much each fella's own guess.::Penelope Worth: But each fella knows inside.::Quirt Evans: Well, there's a lot of gents I wouldn't want to give that much leeway to.
Dr. Mangrum: But of course if you're determined to watch over him, Penny, perhaps you'd better take a pencil and paper with you. His first conscious words should be recorded. They may be of great interest to history... or more possibly to the United States Marshal! Who knows what violence is involved with his battered frame and his bullet holes.
Bradley: So that's Quirt Evans. He's quite a man with the gals. He's closed the eyes of many a man... and opened the eyes of many a woman.
Penelope Worth: Surely you can walk to the barn without that.::Quirt Evans: What?::Penelope Worth: The gun!::Quirt Evans: Oh, well, it balances me. One leg's longer than the other. You know, the weight.::Penelope Worth: Thee are a liar.
[last lines]::Bradley: [the marshal picks up Quirt's gun] Hey, Quirt might need that!::Territorial Marshal Wistful McClintock: No. Only a man that carries a gun ever needs one.::Bradley: What are you going to do with it?::Territorial Marshal Wistful McClintock: Hang it on a wall in my office - with a new rope.
Territorial Marshal Wistful McClintock: When are you and Laredo Stevens going to get around to killing one another?::Quirt Evans: Laredo? Well, we water our horses outa the same trough.::Territorial Marshal Wistful McClintock: Well, I'm sure looking forward to hanging the survivor.
Randy McCall: Ah, you know, Quirt, I hate to shoot people. Remember I shot a wattie once up in Montana. I dreamed about it all the next night. And then, of course, there's always witnesses. And then you got to shoot the witnesses.
Quirt Evans: He swung a wide loop in his younger days, I think.::Penelope Worth: A wide loop?::Quirt Evans: He wasn't too careful whose calf he threw his rope at.
Quirt Evans: [reads the plaque on the wall] "Each human being has an integrity that can be hurt only by the act of that same human being and not by the act of another human being."::Quirt Evans: Is that Quaker stuff?::Penelope Worth: Uh huh.::Quirt Evans: You mean nobody can hurt you but yourself?::Penelope Worth: That's a Friend's belief.::Quirt Evans: Well, supposin' someone whacks you over the head with a branding iron? Won't that hurt?::Penelope Worth: Physically, of course. But in reality it would injure only the person doing the act of force of violence. Only the doer can be hurt by a mean or evil act.::Quirt Evans: Are there very many of you Quakers?::Penelope Worth: Very few.::Quirt Evans: I sort of figured that.
He lived only for revenge...She lived only for his love!
Territorial Marshal Wistful McClintock: You know, Quirt, I always figured on using a new rope when hangin' you... because I kind of respected ya. You never took the best of things and all your men went down looking at ya.
Quirt Evans: I thought you weren't allowed to work on Sunday.::Penelope Worth: Oh, Quirt, there's nothing we're not allowed to do. It's just that we don't believe in doing what we know is wrong.::Quirt Evans: Well, that makes it pretty much each fella's own guess.::Penelope Worth: But each fella knows inside.::Quirt Evans: Well, there's a lot of gents I wouldn't want to give that much leeway to.
Dr. Mangrum: But of course if you're determined to watch over him, Penny, perhaps you'd better take a pencil and paper with you. His first conscious words should be recorded. They may be of great interest to history... or more possibly to the United States Marshal! Who knows what violence is involved with his battered frame and his bullet holes.
Bradley: So that's Quirt Evans. He's quite a man with the gals. He's closed the eyes of many a man... and opened the eyes of many a woman.
Penelope Worth: Surely you can walk to the barn without that.::Quirt Evans: What?::Penelope Worth: The gun!::Quirt Evans: Oh, well, it balances me. One leg's longer than the other. You know, the weight.::Penelope Worth: Thee are a liar.
[last lines]::Bradley: [the marshal picks up Quirt's gun] Hey, Quirt might need that!::Territorial Marshal Wistful McClintock: No. Only a man that carries a gun ever needs one.::Bradley: What are you going to do with it?::Territorial Marshal Wistful McClintock: Hang it on a wall in my office - with a new rope.
Territorial Marshal Wistful McClintock: When are you and Laredo Stevens going to get around to killing one another?::Quirt Evans: Laredo? Well, we water our horses outa the same trough.::Territorial Marshal Wistful McClintock: Well, I'm sure looking forward to hanging the survivor.
Randy McCall: Ah, you know, Quirt, I hate to shoot people. Remember I shot a wattie once up in Montana. I dreamed about it all the next night. And then, of course, there's always witnesses. And then you got to shoot the witnesses.
Quirt Evans: He swung a wide loop in his younger days, I think.::Penelope Worth: A wide loop?::Quirt Evans: He wasn't too careful whose calf he threw his rope at.
Quirt Evans: [reads the plaque on the wall] "Each human being has an integrity that can be hurt only by the act of that same human being and not by the act of another human being."::Quirt Evans: Is that Quaker stuff?::Penelope Worth: Uh huh.::Quirt Evans: You mean nobody can hurt you but yourself?::Penelope Worth: That's a Friend's belief.::Quirt Evans: Well, supposin' someone whacks you over the head with a branding iron? Won't that hurt?::Penelope Worth: Physically, of course. But in reality it would injure only the person doing the act of force of violence. Only the doer can be hurt by a mean or evil act.::Quirt Evans: Are there very many of you Quakers?::Penelope Worth: Very few.::Quirt Evans: I sort of figured that.
Bikinis; top models,
Cilantro; sanguíneo,
Política; bruta,
Destino; asesino.
Clérigo; demente,
Amores; inherentes,
Marciano; marihuano,
Bolocco; por el ano.
Dicen que al tiempo sin viento no hay nada que temer,
Pero esa bruta disputa de razas sin nacer.
Gente; sin mente,
Espacio, latente,
Visiones; castigos,
Canciones; paganas.
Viejos linajes de clases te quieren absorber,
// Si el color de tu corazón,
Se ennegrece sin razón,
Y el color de esta canción,
Te levanta y da noción //
Si no vuelves a partir,
Puedo estar en tu jardín??,
Para asi poder crecer,
Y llegar a enloquecer.
No dejes que el miedo te coma,
No dejes que el miedo te coma,
No dejes de dar un paso un mas.
En la calle se oye una voz,
Perdida inocencia al estar junto a ti,
Ellos me gritan, déjala en paz,
Yo les sonrío, en un tiempo mas.
Para asi poder reir,
Y poder llegar a al fin,
Una sola indicación,
No vengas en luna-sol.
luna-sol luna-sol luna-sol luna-sol
luna-sol luna-sol luna-sol luna-sol
luna-sol luna-sol luna-sol luna-sol
Sólo yo,
Sin el sol,
Despertando,
Sin razón,
Una bruma matinal,
Enceguece mi final.
Quítame los ojos,
Llévate mi lengua,
Rasga mis oídos,
Y traga mi corazón.
Sólo el alma queda,
Nada importa más,
Me deshago entre los ruidos,
Salir a pasear,
Sin destino original,
Quemando aceras sin parar,
Para llegar a algún lugar.
Lluvias, vientos, nubes, sol,
5to patio, desolación,
un martíni por favor,
larga espera en la estación.
// Los tiempos van mas lento,
El frío embriaga la ciudad,
Encerrado en el vagón,
Para estar mucho mejor.//
Lluvias, vientos, nubes, sol,
5to patio, desolación,
12 días de terror,
y aun no encuentro el perdón.
// Los tiempos... //
Coro:
El camino siempre está,
Viejas huellas guiaran,
Experiencia celestial,
Panchi Pinjarese Ud Jaavegaa 2
Zokaa Ek Havaa 2 Kajuvaavegaa
Koi Rok Nahi Phir Paavegaa
Re Panchi Pinjarese Ud Jaavegaa
Sochaa Paayo Ant Nahi Paako Pinjaro Kaiso Panchi 2
Ho Re Man Ki Aangan Ko Suraj 2 Jaane Kona Waqt Dhal Jaayegaa
Kon Rok Nahi Phir Paavegaa
Ban Ko Panchi Bhaago Kahi Paalaa Jise Apanaa Nahi 2
Aur Nehaa Jin Laa Gaayo Tune 2 Din Rain Khado Pachataavegaa
Koi Rok Nahi Phir Paavegaa
Jar Jar Pinjaraa Ko Ye Haal Sukho Hai Ped Patto Nadaan 2
Ore Panchi Kehe Apanaa Ko Chhu Kahaa 2
Jo Hai Sang Yahi Rah Jaavegaa
Koi Rok Nahi Phir Paavegaa
Panchi Pinjarese Ud Jaavegaa
Koi Rok Nahi Phir Paavegaa