trash tarot deck (22/78)
Three Goblin Art

roma★

Origami Around
Stranger Things
Sade Olutola

titsay
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
taylor price
Cosimo Galluzzi

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
AnasAbdin
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

No title available

@theartofmadeline

Kaledo Art
todays bird
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

JVL
d e v o n
seen from Switzerland
seen from Spain

seen from United States
seen from India
seen from United States
seen from Russia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from El Salvador
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Latvia
@persephoneswarrior
trash tarot deck (22/78)
drawing for hermes
love the dynamic pose love the anatomy love the colors love love love
HE NAMED. CRATER ON THE MOON. AFTER HIS LATE WIFE. HE IMMORTALISED HER IN THE SKY. JUST LIKE ARTEMIS DID TO ORION. AND NOW HIS DAUGHTERS. CAN LOOK AT THE MOON. AND TALK TO THEIR MOM. FUCK
Sacred fruit
Please join me in praying to Zeus and Ares for the stop of senseless violence and oppression. May the blood of greedy tyrants spill in abundance instead.
do you think two pennies is still enough for the ferryman or has inflation driven up the fare
if he makes me use an app I am simply not crossing the river Styx.
the inspo vs the art
I love the casual substitution of "gods" instead of "god" in colloquial sayings. "oh my gods" "gods, my feet hurt" etc etc. like yeah deconstruct the societal standard of monotheism with me. let's party
i heart polytheism !!!!
Aphrodite loves sex workers and victims of sexual assault and intersex people and people who are insecure about their body/self harm and nonwhite people and queer people and fat people btw. pass it on
Dionysus Dimetor (twice-born)
Hermes, God of Travel, Flocks, Roads, Thievery, Language, Athletics, Astronomy and Guide of the Dead. 🪽
Friend of Humanity, may you always guide me.
Aphrodite Areia but her weapon of choice is the slipper!
Charlie Rojas, Pomegranate, 2023
The Ship of Theseus is a story of a ship which, over time, has part after part replaced. By the end, 100% of the original ship's pieces have been replaced. The paradox begs the question of whether it is still the same ship.
The Ship of Theseus is a story of a ship which has its pieces replaced one after another. By the end, every single piece of the original ship has changed. The paradox asks if this is the same ship.
The Ship of Theseus tells the allegory of a ship whose crew are replaced one at a time. Eventually every single crewmate has been swapped for a new one. No one left knows what the carved initials in the mast mean. The paradox wonders whether the ship is still the same ship.
The Ship of Theseus refers to a company which has experienced complete turnover and rebranding. The query wishes to know if it is still the same company. The debtors are asking.
The Ship of Theseus is about a family. The original constituents are dead now, replaced by younger generations which have dispersed, found love, married and gained new names. No one is Theseus anymore. No one remembers the bones. But the genes never forget. Who is the family now?
The Ship of Theseus is you, shed of all the cells which first made you. They're stardust again. You'll be stardust many times over. Who are you?
The Ship of Theseus is me. All my words have changed. Who do I get to be now?
Hymn to Bastet for the Protection of a Beloved Pet
Hail to You, Bastet, Lady of Grace,
Soft-pawed Goddess who guards every place.
Mistress of Hearths where love is kept,
Protector of creatures who walk and have slept.
O She Who Purrs in the Sun’s bright flame,
Whose gentle eyes know every name—
Watch over this little one night and day,
Keep harm and sickness far away.
Drive off all shadows that linger near,
Let comfort reign, and calm, not fear.
Fill their life with health and light,
Your blessing guarding through every night.
O Bastet, Kind-Heart, Mother of Peace,
Let joy in their body never cease.
By your grace may their path be clear,
Held in your arms, forever dear.
Anne Carson (2009)
Arthur S. Way (1898)
George Theodoridis (2010)
Ian C. Johnston (2010)
E.P. Coleridge (1910)
Theodore Alois Buckley (1892)
John Peck, Frank Nisetich (1995)
R. Potter (1906)
M. L. West (1987)
William Arrowsmith (1958)
Philip Vellacott (1972)
Michael Wodhull (1782)
Kenneth McLeish (1997)
David Kovacs (2002)
Andrew Wilson (1993)
Euripides - Original (408 BCE)