from historyextra magazine. as additional sources i can offer you the author’s eel mapping project and eel dissertation

No title available

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

PR's Tumblrdome
Sweet Seals For You, Always
d e v o n
dirt enthusiast
Mike Driver

Janaina Medeiros
Xuebing Du

titsay
AnasAbdin
Cosmic Funnies

No title available
Acquired Stardust
almost home
RMH
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Peter Solarz
🪼
seen from Türkiye

seen from Finland
seen from Türkiye
seen from Egypt

seen from Spain
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Sweden

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from India
seen from Canada
seen from Philippines
seen from United States
seen from Vietnam
@ontdekking
from historyextra magazine. as additional sources i can offer you the author’s eel mapping project and eel dissertation
“A National Guardsman who had taken aim at Enjolras lowered his gun, saying: ‘It seems to me that I am about to shoot a flower.’”
[Enjolras], like Harmodius, thought flowers good for nothing except to conceal the sword.”
i know the way people talk about their pets now is probably how we’ve been doing it for all of history. a cat owner in ancient rome saw their cat lounging on the dining pillows and commented “he thinks himself to be the senator claudius 🤣”
Critical Role: 10 Years of Storytelling
Campaign 1, Episode 115, "The Chapter Closes." // Taliesin Jaffe, in "As D&D booms, 'Critical Role' makes its own kind of nerd celebrity" by Sarah Parvini // Campaign 3, Episode 31, "Breaking Point" // On Loving by Forugh Farrokhzad, tr. Sholeh Wolpé // The Legend of Vox Machina at NYCC 2022 // 8-bit Stories // Campaign 1 Wrap-Up // “Without You Without Them” by boygenius // Campaign 2, Episode 141, "Fond Farewells." // Campaign 3: Behind the Set // Letters to Milena by Franz Kafka // Campaign 1, Episode 115, "The Chapter Closes." // Explanation of the final Vex’ahlia playlist by Laura Bailey // Liam's Quest: Full Circle // Backwards by Warsan Shire // Exandria Unlimited: Kymal, Part 2 // Explanation of Fearne’s second playlist by Ashley Johnson // Lighthousekeeping by Jeanette Winterson // San Diego Comic-Con 2023, Critical Role: Fireside Chat & Cast Q&A // Exandria Unlimited Cooldown: Divergence Episode 4 // Campaign 3, Episode 23, "To the Skies." // Explanation of the final Percy playlist by Taliesin Jaffe // "For Good" by Stephen Schwartz // Campaign 3, Episode 91, "True Heroism." // Exandria Unlimited: Calamity, Episode 4, "Fire and Ruin." // Campaign 3, Episode 121, "A New Age Begins."
sometimes I think about how Wymack made the foxes because he never wanted another kid to go through what he did only for his own son to qualify. and then i stare into the sun
I love this picture so much! Post it whenever I come across it.
Inner Mongolian Child
The little girl’s name is Butedmaa and she was just 5 when this picture was taken in 2003 by Han Chengli.
(I used to have a printout of this at my desk at work because I just loved looking at it so much.)
June 2, 1924 Journals of Anais Nin 1923-1927 [volume 3]
in the middle of book 2 of james islington’s licanius trilogy and um. is anyone else seeing this????
Nam June Paik, The More, The Better (1988)
"a heart full of love" is one of the les mis songs for which i find the translated lyrics so much better than the original french ones. in the french version, marius sings "my heart trembles" and cosette answers "as does mine", while the english version has marius singing "i am lost" and colette answering "i am found". instead of suggesting that cosette feels exactly same way marius does, like the french lyrics, the english lyrics emphasize, through the antithesis, how falling in love is a wildly different experience for each of them, but one that has an equally big impact on both their lives. later, in the french version, marius asks "is this a dream?" and cosette subtly rejects this idea by replying "no, this is real". while similar, the english lyrics don't have cosette dismissing marius' idea that he is dreaming, as she instead states that her own perception is different by answering his question of "do i dream?" by singing "i'm awake". falling in love is clarity and security to cosette and confusion and bewilderment to marius, and one perspective does not invalidate the other. the english lyrics fit the story of les mis so well because they highlight the idea that each person can experience love differently, and that there isn't one right way to love another human being.
Just a girl being a little goblin
I'm a big fan of wizards-as-programmers, but I think it's so much better when you lean into programming tropes.
A spell the wizard uses to light the group's campfire has an error somewhere in its depths, and sometimes it doesn't work at all. The wizard spends a lot of his time trying to track down the exact conditions that cause the failure.
The wizard is attempting to create a new spell that marries two older spells together, but while they were both written within the context of Zephyrus the Starweaver's foundational work, they each used a slightly different version, and untangling the collisions make a short project take months of work.
The wizard has grown too comfortable reusing old spells, and in particular, his teleportation spell keeps finding its components rearranged and remixed, its parts copied into a dozen different places in the spellbook. This is overall not actually a problem per se, but the party's rogue grows a bit concerned when the wizard's "drying spell" seems to just be a special case of teleportation where you teleport five feet to the left and leave the wetness behind.
A wizard is constantly fiddling with his spells, making minor tweaks and changes, getting them easier to cast, with better effects, adding bells and whistles. The "shelter for the night" spell includes a tea kettle that brings itself to a boil at dawn, which the wizard is inordinately pleased with. He reports on efficiency improvements to the indifference of anyone listening.
A different wizard immediately forgets all details of his spells after he's written them. He could not begin to tell you how any of it works, at least not without sitting down for a few hours or days to figure out how he set things up. The point is that it works, and once it does, the wizard can safely stop thinking about it.
Wizards enjoy each other's company, but you must be circumspect about spellwork. Having another wizard look through your spellbook makes you aware of every minor flaw, and you might not be able to answer questions about why a spell was written in a certain way, if you remember at all.
Wizards all have their own preferences as far as which scripts they write in, the formatting of their spellbook, its dimensions and material quality, and of course which famous wizards they've taken the most foundational knowledge from. The enlightened view is that all approaches have their strengths and weaknesses, but this has never stopped anyone from getting into a protracted argument.
Sometimes a wizard will sit down with an ancient tome attempting to find answers to a complicated problem, and finally find someone from across time who was trying to do the same thing, only for the final note to be "nevermind, fixed it".
widow's bay. s01e05.
A Knights Dress by Frieda Lepold