Two opposed views:
A lover without indiscretion is no lover at all.
[Thomas Hardy 1876]
A time to embrace; a time to refrain from embracing.
[Ecclesiastes 3:1-8]
Hear part of this here:
A lover without indiscretion is no lover at all.
[Thomas Hardy 1876]
A time to embrace; a time to refrain from embracing.
[Ecclesiastes 3:1-8]
Hear part of this here:
I incline to the second, on the whole.
ReplyDeleteFirstly, there's a time and a place.
Secondly, I'm not sure I want everyone knowing my business in that department.
I remember the song. A coincidence, as I've just mentioned something like that on my blog. Sorry been absent a couple of days - been unwell.
ReplyDeleteWell I think it can be a combination of the two!!!
ReplyDeleteCrushed - my head tells me so too.
ReplyDeleteWelshcakes - sorry to hear that. I'll be over shortly.
Cherie - maybe but sometimes a caprice can injure.
That's quite the risqué photo for here James.
ReplyDeleteSo don't be telling details to your mates but I hope the time to embrace makes up for the time of refraining.
Ah, decisions, JMB, decisions.
ReplyDeletemaybe but sometimes a caprice can injure.
ReplyDeleteAh yes that is true!
I think I was reading something completely different into the words.