It's the heat, the heat, I tell you.
Oh, it's the heat? I hadn't noticed.
What with all the fur on us? Yeah, I
think you're right. It's the heat.
Well, there's at least one very
wet answer to that...
......................................................................................
......................................................................................
......................................................................................
Note: The Thursday Prompt that got this one written
was 'cool water.'
LINK TO: Text Version
<<<< To Wolf and Bunny Table of Contents
Oh, it's the heat? I hadn't noticed.
What with all the fur on us? Yeah, I
think you're right. It's the heat.
Well, there's at least one very
wet answer to that...
......................................................................................
......................................................................................
......................................................................................
>>>>> On Summer's Heat (#5) -- Spoken Word <<<<<
By Fred Brown, Aug 7/2011
https://www.furaffinity.net/user/fwbrown61/
Copyright 2011 All rights reserved, all commercial
infringements prosecuted, website display permission
available upon request. Non-personal distro is infringement.
Recorded on Mar 4/22
Note: The Thursday Prompt that got this one written
was 'cool water.'
LINK TO: Text Version
<<<< To Wolf and Bunny Table of Contents
Category Music / All
Species Wolf
Size 120 x 120px
File Size 2.58 MB
We-ll, considering the action this sonnet describes, my wolf hubby has clearly caught some type of non-fishy tasty prey. Nom nom, lap lap, squee squee.
Non-explicit sonnet here, of course, but it obliquely invites the reader's imagination to go there (saves me work). Something Mr. Bill did too, but in terms of Elizabethan language for Elizabethan audiences. Modern audiences have *no* idea.
'Hair pie' indeed. :- )
fwbrown61
Non-explicit sonnet here, of course, but it obliquely invites the reader's imagination to go there (saves me work). Something Mr. Bill did too, but in terms of Elizabethan language for Elizabethan audiences. Modern audiences have *no* idea.
'Hair pie' indeed. :- )
fwbrown61
FA+
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