El mismo lobo tiene momentos de debilidad, en que se pone del lado del cordero y piensa: Ojalá que huya.
Adolfo Bioy Casares, Guirlandas con amores (1959)
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we're not kids anymore.
sheepfilms

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Kiana Khansmith
taylor price

Andulka
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almost home

tannertan36

⁂

if i look back, i am lost
Peter Solarz
cherry valley forever

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
RMH
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Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

pixel skylines
Cosimo Galluzzi
seen from Malaysia
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@hierarchia
El mismo lobo tiene momentos de debilidad, en que se pone del lado del cordero y piensa: Ojalá que huya.
Adolfo Bioy Casares, Guirlandas con amores (1959)
What’s a Jewish magician without a cauldron?
This is a mid-20th century magic cauldron from Romania, inscribed in Hebrew with the incantation משביע אני עליך השמש המאיר על הארץ (”I adjure you, O sun that shines on the earth”). This phrase first appears in Sefer haRazim (”The Book of Secrets”), a Jewish magical text from Late Antiquity, where it is part of a ritual to discover “what will be in each and every year,” involving inscribed slips of papyrus, oil, and the adjuration of angels and the sun to reveal the future (1.99). This ritual is repeated in Sefer Razi’el haMal’akh (”The Book of the Angel Raziel”), which was first printed in Amsterdam in 1701 and was incredibly popular across the Jewish world.
This cauldron, from the Gross Family Collection (027.003.013), was part of the Paris Museum of Jewish Art and History’s recent exhibition Magic: Angels and Demons in the Jewish Tradition… The museum catalogue describes this object as a cauldron for “casting lead,” a common magical practice for divination in various parts of Europe known as molybdomancy: lead (or tin) is melted and then poured into cold water, and the different shapes that it forms are then interpreted.
Topkapi Ceiling, Istanbul.
Miniature of Marie Antoinette. [source: Sadde-Dijon, via Auction.fr]
“Soft matter”. Photographed by Maxime Imbert for Puss Puss Magazine
Ezra Miller learns the Finger Heart.
South Tyrol
플라워 패브릭 콘
Lorde - ‘Yellow Flicker Beat’ (2014) | John Everett Millais - Joan of Arc (1865) | x
i annoy people.
(newt scamander moodboard)
Scent bottle (18th century) enamelled decoration with the motto ‘Tout pour vous’ (All for you).
Image and text courtesy MFA Boston.