Contract on Love: Difference between revisions

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Relatively straightforward and uncontroversial use of legal concepts by Mr. Wonder, who elsewhere has musically ruminated on the formalities of executing [[deed]]s in [[signed, Sealed, Delivered]].
Relatively straightforward and uncontroversial use of legal concepts by Mr. Wonder, who elsewhere has musically ruminated on the formalities of executing [[deed]]s in [[Signed, Sealed, Delivered]].


Here Mr Wonder addresses the formal ingredients of a binding legal agreement. “You've got to sign/My contract on love,” he sings. “Write it in your heart/That you'll never do anything/To ever make us part.”
Here Mr Wonder addresses the formal ingredients of a binding legal agreement. “You've got to sign/My contract on love,” he sings. “Write it in your heart/That you'll never do anything/To ever make us part.”


Clearly, the formalities of evidencing ''[[consensus ad idem]]'' are important, to Mr Wonder, who finally implores his contractual counterparty of love to: ''“Sign it. Sign it. Sign it. Sign it.”''
Clearly, the formalities of evidencing a ''[[consensus ad idem]]'' are important to Mr Wonder — of course at the forefront of his mind in [[Signed, Sealed, Delivered]], when he finally implores his contractual counterparty of love to: ''“Sign it. Sign it. Sign it. Sign it.”''




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