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MODERN ROMANCE

“POPPING THE QUESTION” UNDER FIRE. 1 WAR TIME & OTHER PROPOSALS. War-time leads to a number of proposals of marriage taking place in unusual circumstances, writes Adrian Grand, well-known London journalist. One young newly-wed whom I questioned recently told me that her husband asked her to marry him while they were being machine-gunned in France. "We were making for the coast,” she said, “and had to hop out of our car and lie flat by the side of the road. As we lay there, with bombs bursting near by. and bullets striking the ground all round us, Jack asked me to marry him. I said ‘Yes,’ and he just grabbed my .hand, and there we lay, smiling at each other. Queer, isn't it—and so different from anything I'd imagined.” Omer women have told me that they wish men would consider the romantic side a little more, and not make their proposals so matter-of-fact. Least oi concerned a couple swimming at the seaside one fine summer. As they swam out to a raft, the man popped the ageold query. "Doris”—gasp—“will you”—gasp — “marry me, darling?” “As I said ‘yes,’ ” the girl revealed, “a big wave slapped me in the face, but my answer must have been obvious, for Bert let out a yell of joy and grabbed me. Of course, we both sank, and in no time at all we were surrounded by would-be rescuers who cheered us when we told them the truth." “You wouldn’t believe it,” said one young wife, “but my husband proposed to me when he had a dreadful cold. His eyes were red, he kept sniffing and sneezing, and when he had asked and been accepted, he added, ‘You’d better not kiss me, dear, or you'll catch my cold.’ “Poor dear, he couldn’t help it—but why on earth did he have to choose that most unromantic time to pop the question?” One very attractive girl—unmarried —told me she might have been wed if she had been asked properly. The place and time were perfect, she confessed, but the declaration was not. “He took my hand and looked into my eyes—and said, of all things. ‘Gil, I’ve decided to marry you.’ I think it was the blunt statement without any reference to me, which made me reply, ‘That’s a pity, because I've decided to refuse you.’ And it was a pity, because I was quite fond of him,” she added with a sigh. One other proposal I was told about

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAITA19410523.2.17

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Times-Age, 23 May 1941, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
413

MODERN ROMANCE Wairarapa Times-Age, 23 May 1941, Page 3

MODERN ROMANCE Wairarapa Times-Age, 23 May 1941, Page 3

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