<P> I really want to know you Really want to go with you Really want to show you, Lord, that it won't take long, my Lord </P> <P> Following this verse, in response to the main vocal's repetition of the song title, Harrison devised a choral line singing the Hebrew word of praise, "hallelujah", common in the Christian and Jewish religions . Later in the song, after an instrumental break, these voices return, now chanting the first twelve words of the Hare Krishna mantra, known more reverentially as the Maha mantra: </P> <P> Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare Hare Rama, Hare Rama </P> <P> These Sanskrit words are the main mantra of the Hare Krishna faith, with which Harrison identified, although he did not belong to any spiritual organisation . In his 1980 autobiography, I, Me, Mine, Harrison explained that he intended repeating and alternating "hallelujah" and "Hare Krishna" to show that the two terms meant "quite the same thing", as well as to have listeners chanting the mantra "before they knew what was going on!" </P>

Who wrote the song when i think about the lord