Detail: Herodias, 1843, by Paul Delaroche.
Jules of Nature
ojovivo
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
RMH
Monterey Bay Aquarium
art blog(derogatory)
styofa doing anything
NASA
Cosmic Funnies
One Nice Bug Per Day
Three Goblin Art
trying on a metaphor
cherry valley forever

pixel skylines
almost home
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
occasionally subtle
we're not kids anymore.

if i look back, i am lost
hello vonnie
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@aentigone-blog
Detail: Herodias, 1843, by Paul Delaroche.
songs to stand in the kitchen holding a knife to
Adèle Haenel photographed by Julien T. Hamon.
First still of Jenna Coleman as Marie-Andrée Leclerc, next to Tahar Rahim as Charles Sobhraj in the upcoming BBC1 and Netflix drama The Serpent!
I’m so excited for this!
The Double Life of Véronique (1991) dir. Krzysztof Kieslowski
Like so many sharp things, I know
I couldn’t stand to watch myself disappear into you.
— Bailey Cohen, from “Have I Ever Been Wicked?” published in The Boiler
So you know why I’m like this—why my rage is in a jar with berries from that
road, why I spread it like jam over pavement, dressed in magic and chiffon. Watch me as I terrify the best of you, still—that is the gift I offer from behind my eyes. Here: A little ocean we
knew is finding its way back to me, salting my veins. So I’ve got a new plague to shake out, an animal mouth, safe with nobody watching.
— E. Kristin Anderson, from “Find an Answer in Floorboards or Flowers,” published in Ninth Letter
Count your windows, city. Watch how they erase me. As if I were a sentence, a woman.
Caitlin Scarano, from “To the City With Her Skull Wind,” Do Not Bring Him Water (via lifeinpoetry)
In my palms lie these two clear efforts of my eyes, / The very essence of this tormented moment.
Joan Murray, from “Orpheus: Three Eclogues,” Drafts, Fragments, and Poems (via lifeinpoetry)
The other thing was that I’d discovered I was a cipher.
“I am an empty thing. A fragmented mutating subject.”
“No, you just feel that way,” they told me.
“What’s the difference?”
— Suzanne Scanlon, from Promising Young Women
Sophocles, Philoctetes
A Prayer for a Strong Heart
vintage linen handkerchief, cotton embroidery, cotton embroidery floss
10” by 10” .2013. Embroidery by Lindsey Windland
“I think there’s a rich ream of horror, from The Haunting of Hill House to Ghostwatch, that delves into the idea that certain places can simply go wrong – and once these bad environments have been established and ostracised by society, they can’t be exorcised. They simply keep accruing power through the individual stories that play tragically out in their shadow.
“I mention a real-life example of that kind of bad architecture in one episode; the Pope Lick Bridge in Kentucky, a place that looks and feels so sinister that it developed its own local folklore about a goat-man who attacks people who stray too close to the edge – and which has ended up resulting in deaths as visitors peer over the side trying to get a peek at the monster.
“I find this kind of stuff fascinating, because it plays into my own paranoia about environments, and my dislike of ghost stories with explicably human antagonists. Like David says in the first episode, people aren’t frightening. Places are frightening.
“If I’m sitting alone at home on a dark and stormy night, and I glance nervously up towards the bedroom doorway, my fear is not that my house is being haunted by a spirit called Mabel who died in the 19th century at the age of fourteen and is constantly seeking her favourite teddy bear… because all of these details both humanise her and make her ridiculous.
“My fear is that there will be something standing in the doorway, because the doorway is where things come to stand.
“Because unoccupied spaces, in our imaginations, must find something to fill them.”
— from “The Saturday Interview: ‘I Am in Eskew’ podcast”
heather havrilesky
The Twilight Zone (TV Series, 1959 – 1964)
– Mary Oliver, First Snow
ms robinson i have feelings for you