Saturday, April 18, 2020

The Days Melt Together... Fri... Saturday Femme Fatale.....












































































































  Until tomorrow.......









8 comments:

  1. Good one! Thanks for the laugh!

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  2. Best use of masks I've seen in a month.

    PS I don't think the first one's are real.

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  3. The Black Death was 14th century, Newton was 17th century.

    I think I have a real problem here.

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    Replies
    1. With calculus or the time frame ? 😂. I didn’t research the meme , now, I have to.

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  4. Thanks Irish. It was a sad Saturday morning yesterday without FFF. Call me a Demoncrat; I appear to be hooked on your hard labor and the weekly picture show for which I contribute nothing.

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  5. There was also another major epidemic of the plague in the 17th century. Plague was a recurring theme.

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    Replies
    1. I found this

      When the Great Plague of London ravaged through the British city beginning in 1665, Issac Newton was a student at Trinity College, Cambridge. As described in Gale Christianson's Isaac Newton, a few months after acquiring his undergraduate degree in the spring of that year, the 23-year-old retreated to his family farm of Woolsthorpe Manor, some 60 miles northwest of Cambridge. Along with being located a safe distance from the carriers of the horrific disease that was wiping out the population of the city, Woolsthorpe provided the sort of quiet, serene environment that allowed a mind like Newton's to journey, uninterrupted, to the farthest reaches of the imagination. This period is now known as annus mirabilis – the "year of wonders."

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    2. Irish,
      If it ever becomes a choice between digging up information on when the plague and Sir Issac Newton crossed paths, and finding more of the delights that are nude or partially nude women, I vote for letting Sir Issac Newton Rest In Peace. And this post had some especially beautiful examples of the female form. Well done.
      Pigpen51

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