So really, deep inside you, even though you told him to go **** himself your brain and conscious wanted to tell the Mrs to go **** herself for her part I get you bro Mornin
Let's see how it goes with Gessa's op, but eye suspect he will be looking to get back on the sight again soon
Saturday if you mean the Pope. At least they haven’t cancelled the football like that nonsense when the Queen died. Hope sausage fingers has the good grace to die in summer when the time comes.
I was thinking yesterday, because I've never been to Rome, I'd like to see the interior of some of these buidlings, minus the Pope and queues of people without their smart phones. The artistic beauty created by humans, with the place currently being stunk out with a dead body, we have some strange traits.
Fabulous (but rather expensive) city - went there for my honeymoon back in 1990 - was more into the antiquity of the Empire than the Christian religious aspects tbf - but the Vatican and Cistine are quite incredible ... we stayed in a small hotel close to the Colosseum and most of the 'sights' were walkable from there ...
French Catherals are awesome - the one in Chartres (Notre Dame) is very much like Notre Dame in Paris if not as large ...
There's a church in Gravesend with Pocahontas statue outside - vague memories that I use to use their grounds to cut through from the high street to one of the lower car parks - I've never been inside the church and didn't spot Meeko in the ovegrowth.... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocahontas In March 1617, Rolfe and Pocahontas boarded a ship to return to Virginia, but they had sailed only as far as Gravesend on the River Thames when Pocahontas became gravely ill.[55] She was taken ashore, where she died from unknown causes, aged approximately 21 and "much lamented". According to Rolfe, she declared that "all must die"; for her, it was enough that her child lived.[56] Speculated causes of her death include pneumonia, smallpox, tuberculosis, hemorrhagic dysentery ("the Bloody flux") and poisoning.[57][58] Pocahontas's funeral took place on March 21, 1617, in the parish of St George's Church, Gravesend.[59] Her grave is thought to be underneath the church's chancel, though that church was destroyed in a fire in 1727 and its exact site is unknown.[60] Since 1958 she has been commemorated by a life-sized bronze statue in St. George's churchyard, a replica of the 1907 Jamestown sculpture by the American sculptor William Ordway Partridge.[61] please log in to view this image please log in to view this image