Dimensions
105 x 164 x 6mm
A wonderful and pithy collection of sayings, advice, confession and home truths about the relationships between men and women.
A book of home truths, published in 1910 and authored by the pseudonomous Celt, who says: 'Being a lover of peace and having a horror of bloodshed, so far as personally concerned, I have thought it wise to take no visible credit for my own contributions.' Probably very wise. This delightful collection contains gems such as:
* Many a man has fallen in love with a peach only to discover that Fate has handed him a lemon.
* Never take a better half until you are sure of better quarters.
* Few men reach fifty without being grateful they didn't get the women they wanted.
* Love is blind they say. That perhaps is why he depends so largely on the sense of touch.
* Don't make love to a girl in a hammock; you may both fall out.
* Timeless advice and all too true.