Archive for December 12th, 2009
Spanish Poem — last line is something like “Dios, estamos en total” — Anyone have any idea which poem?
hortensio_2000 asked:
There is a poem written in Spanish I am trying to find again. I first learned about it about a decade ago in my first-level Spanish classes. It’s very beautiful and it describes my state of mind lately so I am eager to have it with me again. In the poem, the writer talks about God and his contentment with what He has brought so far in his life. The last line expresses this eloquently and beautifully by saying that he and God are now at one, or even, or mutual — or that he had received enough and does not feel as though he would expect any more from Him or from his life because his contentment at this point is so great. I think the last line of the poem is something such as “Dios, estamos en total.” That’s about all I can remember — so it’s making it hard to search for the poem. From what I can recall, it is a pretty esteemed poem, written by a writer who was fairly well-known. The thing that has stuck with me, though, is the concept in that last line. Does anyone have a clue?
Best Learn Spanish Software
There is a poem written in Spanish I am trying to find again. I first learned about it about a decade ago in my first-level Spanish classes. It’s very beautiful and it describes my state of mind lately so I am eager to have it with me again. In the poem, the writer talks about God and his contentment with what He has brought so far in his life. The last line expresses this eloquently and beautifully by saying that he and God are now at one, or even, or mutual — or that he had received enough and does not feel as though he would expect any more from Him or from his life because his contentment at this point is so great. I think the last line of the poem is something such as “Dios, estamos en total.” That’s about all I can remember — so it’s making it hard to search for the poem. From what I can recall, it is a pretty esteemed poem, written by a writer who was fairly well-known. The thing that has stuck with me, though, is the concept in that last line. Does anyone have a clue?
Best Learn Spanish Software


