You can pour into her, into this empty space that is called Sappho… all your own ideas and all your own desires
Edith Hall on Sappho’s fragments [x] (via sons-of-ilios)
we're not kids anymore.
trying on a metaphor
AnasAbdin
noise dept.

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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
i don't do bad sauce passes

#extradirty
h

roma★
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

ellievsbear
wallacepolsom

@theartofmadeline

★
styofa doing anything
Today's Document

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TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Keni

seen from T1
seen from Germany
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seen from Türkiye
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seen from South Africa
seen from United States
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seen from Belgium
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@augustus-be-damned
You can pour into her, into this empty space that is called Sappho… all your own ideas and all your own desires
Edith Hall on Sappho’s fragments [x] (via sons-of-ilios)
self care is declaring yourself dictator for life and then becoming a god after getting stabbed 23 times
Pergamon Altar
The Pergamon Altar is a monumental construction built during the reign of king Eumenes II in the first half of the 2nd century BC on one of the terraces of the acropolis of the ancient Greek city of Pergamon.
In 1878, the German engineer Carl Humann began official excavations on the acropolis of Pergamon. Upon negotiating with the Turkish government (a participant in the excavation), it was agreed that all frieze fragments found at the time would become the property of the Berlin museums, where they still remain today.
ancient greek has a word, lesbarches, which is supposed to refer to the president of the lesbian council, and i’d just like to propose that lesbarch be the new term to refer to someone in charge of a group of wlw
Valletta, Malta 🇲🇹
Mediterranean Food
Auberge Burgundy Guesthouse by Safari-Partners on Flickr.
Section of the Roman theater in Bet She'an (ancient Scythopolis), Israel
Wow. What a day. First that restaurant by the bay. And then that, that play, that, that, that Oedipus thing. Man, I thought I had problems.
Hercules (1997)
i know nothing
Socrates- 1982
who the heck is socrates this is my post
Segesta, Sicily by James Appleton
Leaning columns in the temple at Karnak, Thebes, Egypt.
Coloured lithograph by Louis Haghe, 1849
Verona, Italy.
“Although the Egyptian sources equate the deceased king with several deities, there is a clear and constant emphasis throughout most of Egyptian history on the association with the king of the netherworld god Osiris. This was doubtless because the role of kingship fitted the Osiride mythology particularly well. Every pharaoh ceased to function as the earthly Horus -and son of Osiris- upon death and was identified by virtue of death with the deceased Osiris. He thus stood as predecessor in relation to the next living king as the mythical Osiris did to Horus. According to this symbolic metaphor, by becoming one with Osiris the dead king also became ruler of the afterlife region switching realms, as it were, from rule over the living to rule over the dead.” ― The Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt, by Richard Wilkinson
someone: so why do you like latin literature so much
me, reading the golden ass, in which a man is turned into a donkey when he’s fucking with magic, talks about how big his new donkey dick is, and worries that he won’t be able to sleep with somebody because his donkey dick is too big for her: oh well i just think the literature is just so beautiful and inspiring
just Mykonos. little Venice.