Welcome to the world of the Vincent D'Onofrio obsessed - and a bit of real life thrown in.
Saturday, June 09, 2007
But Not Forgotten
And not gone either (thank goodness) so here's a selection from an episode I've just discovered I only partially capped. Alas, no pictures of Bobby comforting Madonna-face by stroking her hand.
Impossible though this is to believe, knowing we now DEFINITELY have our Beloved Bobby back for a 7th year *dances a jig around the room (again!)* he looks even more gorgeous to me today than yesterday - although this time yesterday I was throwing a mega-snit at Wolf and Associates!
No, Michael, please don't piss off, keep challenging me. It's very rewarding to lock horns with a worthy opponent, but they don't come along very often, so until one does, you'll do nicely. :)
Grammatically and stylistically one should usually avoid starting a sentence with a conjunction. On occasion, however, artistic licence demands it.
For example, in the beautiful Gerard Manley Hopkins poem "The Windhover", not only does Hopkins follow an exclamation mark with a conjuntion, he uses it emphatically, putting it in capital letters: "AND the fire that breaks from thee then a billion Times told lovelier, more dangerous, O my chevalier!"
Impossible though this is to believe, knowing we now DEFINITELY have our Beloved Bobby back for a 7th year *dances a jig around the room (again!)* he looks even more gorgeous to me today than yesterday -
ReplyDeletealthough this time yesterday I was throwing a mega-snit at Wolf and Associates!
Bobby...I Love Him!!
ReplyDeleteToday is a MUCH better day :)
two hours of bobby bobby back to back just now, your pics and shortly mike cobb makes for a most pleasant evening... sigh
ReplyDeleteJust imagine two hours of Bobby Bobby front-to-front, Ann...
ReplyDeletewonderful pics! can't do anything wrong when you spoil us with this lovely face. ;)
ReplyDeleteVal - like a Bobby sandwich?
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ReplyDeleteNo, Michael, please don't piss off, keep challenging me. It's very rewarding to lock horns with a worthy opponent, but they don't come along very often, so until one does, you'll do nicely. :)
ReplyDeleteGrammatically and stylistically one should usually avoid starting a sentence with a conjunction. On occasion, however, artistic licence demands it.
For example, in the beautiful Gerard Manley Hopkins poem "The Windhover", not only does Hopkins follow an exclamation mark with a conjuntion, he uses it emphatically, putting it in capital letters: "AND the fire that breaks from thee then a billion Times told lovelier, more dangerous, O my chevalier!"
I bow to the master.
This comment has been removed by the author.
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