“But there are moments in life worth purchasing with worlds, and moments so
charged, so full of emotion that they become somehow timeless, like the
moment when Inger and Emil sat on that bench in the rose garden and
smile at the camera, or when Inger’s mother raised the Venetian blind to
the very top of her high sitting-room window, or when Malcom opened up
his jeweler’s box and was about to ask my sister to marry him (because
he never did ask her, I know that now) and this is one of those
moments…”
Sorry, I had to cut it off there. That is the beginning of the longest sentence in English literature from The Rotters’ Club by Jonathan Coe. It is 13,955 words long, so I will not break your blog by including the whole thing. 😛
15 Comments
DawnMariesDream
What up boo?!? bah ha ha
lonestarangel
OMG you have made me LOL a lot this afternoon. Thank you!
DawnMariesDream
https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/bc397d73986005c5fa700a778d85c7f505177b01d1cd4c0e427494640cfb00e8.jpg
This is me with you!!! Love ya!! Oh and I’m crying I’m laughing so hard.
lonestarangel
I love you! I always laugh to the point I cannot speak with you. You just brighten my world. Thank you!
cowboybubba
Will you send me nude pictures?
lonestarangel
Pfft! That is a question, not a sentence. Would you like a do over? lol
lonestarangel
Although, now that I say that, so was Dawn Marie’s!
cowboybubba
She came into my life like a thunderstorm.
Doug
LOL!
dwwindsor
The adjective that qualified the noun illustrated through an adverb the action.
lonestarangel
Who has a mind such as this, but Dwwindsor himself?
Cliff
“But there are moments in life worth purchasing with worlds, and moments so
charged, so full of emotion that they become somehow timeless, like the
moment when Inger and Emil sat on that bench in the rose garden and
smile at the camera, or when Inger’s mother raised the Venetian blind to
the very top of her high sitting-room window, or when Malcom opened up
his jeweler’s box and was about to ask my sister to marry him (because
he never did ask her, I know that now) and this is one of those
moments…”
Sorry, I had to cut it off there. That is the beginning of the longest sentence in English literature from The Rotters’ Club by Jonathan Coe. It is 13,955 words long, so I will not break your blog by including the whole thing. 😛
lonestarangel
WOW! That is impressive! Beautiful writing.
Zany
Angel is a very sexy lady!
(U didn’t say what kind of sentence)
lonestarangel
LOL thank you Zany