Is this now the JL lurve thread? Or something........
Anyway - yes, it was me with the satsumas. (And Mildred brought along her melons of course) and then along came JayJay with a few grapes......which were a new variety she bought from the corner shop in Essex. Anyway, I dropped one and trod on it - and it was very strange, because the grape didn't squeal or say anything - it just gave a little whine.
Well JL, I don’t think it is just a in but also that we all appreciate each others assets:
MarkW - Special wit with the subtle underlining of innuendo
RubyRed – Northern grit often presented poetically
JayJay – Bit of Essex cheekiness
Frolicols – Well he just Fro and we love him for it
Myself – Hopefully I bring a little fruitiness to the thread
And now…
JiveLad – Well where do I begin, subtle no, has an Essex fixation (there is help out there for that) but impressively he is like someone who gropes around in the dark but somehow delivers the goods. So yes we do miss you when you deprive us of your assets
You are too kind Maxine. I've been letting work get in the way of innuendo and this must come to an end.
We do all bring our own special perspective. Sometimes JL can be subtle but I like it best when he rogers a topic into submission and accompanies that with a suitable picture.
Well.........I guess that can only lead on to discussion of the comings (and goings - but mainly cumings) of the current word game sextet. One thing is clear to me - and that is we need more orgies.....
....just like my great-great-great-great-great Uncle Jivus Ladius did in Roman times (notice how he gently holds the breast - and ponders his next move......).
Last edited by JiveLad; 14th-July-2009 at 01:37 PM.
if you love the life you live then you'll get a lot more done
As Your post was funny JL I’ll forgive you for merely rearranging the letters and not replacing one.
No matter what the wrongs or rights of the past isn’t it funny how history has such a habit of repeating itself. I’d love to know how those 2 met, was it on a dance floor in Alexandria or maybe some early package holiday by Easy Chariot
Centurion Ladius met the lady Mildrata when they clashed over priorites in a clothes shop. Mildrata needed sarongs for the troupe of dancing girls she managed and Jivus Ladius needed tunics for the men in his command. The shop had limited cloth supplies. In the end Mildrata graciously agreed that her girls' sarongs would just have to be held up until the needs of Ladius and his boys had been satisfied.
And so began a beautiful relationship that has echoed through the generations to this very day.
as stylish as ever..........
Yes - and of course through history, from Rome, we moved forward to the times of the French Revolution when Mildariette (Mildreds great-great-great-grand-grand-mer) was a dazzling socialite on the Parisian scene. Pre the revolution, she would walk the boulevards of the South Bank with her poodles, enter the most fashionable of street cafes ('Le Garage') with a flourish and there would be a set of smartly dressed garçons ready to satisfy her every need.
And here she is playing with her puppies....
Last edited by JiveLad; 16th-July-2009 at 09:31 PM.
Ah the sublimeness of the Parisien set. The men have developed a style of wearing a racoon on their faces, how irritating though for the milk porcelain features of the gentile Mildreds, who graciously stroke their pupppies whilst taking refreshments in the sun.
if you love the life you live then you'll get a lot more done
I was just thinking Rubyred that this thread has suddenly taken a rather highbrow turn with JL bringing to our attention the delights of Renoir (one of my favourite impressionist artists but not my favourite that is Claude Monet)
So I thought I would give a brief discussion on Joseph Conrad, Polish born author of books such as Lord Jim, the quintessential Englishman, which is strange as he never spoke English until he was in his twenties.
Anyway Rubyred maybe you could enlighten us on some poets
There are currently 4 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 4 guests)
Bookmarks