the black art, anne sexton
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the black art, anne sexton
Codi Ann Thomsen
“What God intended for you goes far beyond anything you can imagine. Never lose hope and hang on to God’s hand.”
— New Testament | Good News
“There’s no limit to friendship”
@WeHeartIt /entry/41719157
British violin maker Alfred Eaglen with a collection of his miniature violins in Yorkshire, UK, circa 1970.
Photo by Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
—The books I read are the ones I knew and loved when I was a young man and to which I return as you do to old friends: the Old Testament, Dickens, Conrad, Cervantes, Don Quixote—I read that every year, as some do the Bible. Flaubert, Balzac—he created an intact world of his own, a bloodstream running through twenty books—Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Shakespeare. I read Melville occasionally and, of the poets, Marlowe, Campion, Jonson, Herrick, Donne, Keats, and Shelley. I still read Housman. I’ve read these books so often that I don’t always begin at page one and read on to the end. I just read one scene, or about one character, just as you’d meet and talk to a friend for a few minutes.
William Faulkner, in His Interview with The Paris Review (via antigonick)
Louvre Museum, Paris, Spring cleaning in the Great Hall.
Pierre Jahan, 1947
Moon and Venus by frankastro
Frank Sinatra dances with wife Mia Farrow, c. 1967
Joy Elizabeth Bythrow | @morningslikethese
White Peony tulip by Mia Tarney