Shrouded by time
Kept deep underground
Where the glass looks back
And lost spirits can be found.
Monterey Bay Aquarium

★
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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we're not kids anymore.
𓃗

JVL

@theartofmadeline
NASA
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Cosmic Funnies
Sweet Seals For You, Always

Janaina Medeiros
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

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Fai_Ryy
Today's Document
d e v o n
Jules of Nature

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@serifinaxxx
Shrouded by time
Kept deep underground
Where the glass looks back
And lost spirits can be found.
MANIFEST
MANIFEST
There sure were a lot of references to the Entities... And who so far hasn't tried a ritual?... And what did the last successful ritual need, someone marked by all the entities... And what if you could do one with somewhere marked by all the entities?
Here's what I found in the Statement - comments and additions welcome!
SLAUGHTER :Did his terror call to him with the drumbeat voice of carnage?
CORRUPTION :Did it sing to him with the squirming melody of decay?
STRANGER:strange. That a name, a face
VAST? :A hundred titles, whispered in the secret places of every era of every corner of our world
END: his end was quick and clean.
EXTINCTION? :Once he even found a new room, though he very wisely did not enter it.
VAST :passage to a heavenly sphere... talk of dimensions, nor a mind able to meaningfully conceive of worlds beyond the one within which he lived
LONELY :seeking some peace and removal from his more raucous colleagues... he chose to live apart from his peers
WEB : plotting against him, weaving intricate schemes
DARK:knife in the dark
FEAR SOUP: luring in the servants of other powers,
SPIRAL:a sculptor of puppets,
FLESH: who made his strings from the tendons of those he felt did not appreciate his art
STRANGER: he would dance them around in a mocking effigy.
HUNT: slain by a crusading hunter
EYE :he knew the darkest desires of many souls
WEB? :and had the wit to use them to their best effect
BURIED : buried alive deep beneath the house in which he had drawn his schemes by a man whose teeth were always stained with mud.
WEB: many schemers and spiders
HUNT?: full-throated monsters.
WEB: Twisting manipulators
SPIRAL :furtive liars
DESOLATION :murdered by flame, immolated by the Chosen of the Ravening Burn. The house of the time was destroyed along with him, reduced to ashes
This writing is so good!!!
There sure were a lot of references to the Entities... And who so far hasn't tried a ritual?... And what did the last successful ritual need, someone marked by all the entities... And what if you could do one with somewhere marked by all the entities?
Here's what I found in the Statement - comments and additions welcome!
SLAUGHTER :Did his terror call to him with the drumbeat voice of carnage?
CORRUPTION :Did it sing to him with the squirming melody of decay?
STRANGER:strange. That a name, a face
VAST? :A hundred titles, whispered in the secret places of every era of every corner of our world
END: his end was quick and clean.
EXTINCTION? :Once he even found a new room, though he very wisely did not enter it.
VAST :passage to a heavenly sphere... talk of dimensions, nor a mind able to meaningfully conceive of worlds beyond the one within which he lived
LONELY :seeking some peace and removal from his more raucous colleagues... he chose to live apart from his peers
WEB : plotting against him, weaving intricate schemes
DARK:knife in the dark
FEAR SOUP: luring in the servants of other powers,
SPIRAL:a sculptor of puppets,
FLESH: who made his strings from the tendons of those he felt did not appreciate his art
STRANGER: he would dance them around in a mocking effigy.
HUNT: slain by a crusading hunter
EYE :he knew the darkest desires of many souls
WEB? :and had the wit to use them to their best effect
BURIED : buried alive deep beneath the house in which he had drawn his schemes by a man whose teeth were always stained with mud.
WEB: many schemers and spiders
HUNT?: full-throated monsters.
WEB: Twisting manipulators
SPIRAL :furtive liars
DESOLATION :murdered by flame, immolated by the Chosen of the Ravening Burn. The house of the time was destroyed along with him, reduced to ashes
This writing is so good!!!
So thanks to following her on Instagram, I saw this before listening to the episode. So my mental image was already made, and any scary-ness of Jane Doe was eliminated by the "local fab drag/burlesque artist is in my podcast" fangirl in me
I know some people around here wanted to draw attention to the significant uses of "I see you" at Tma season almost-finales (Sasha and the table, Jon, Tim, Martin in the lonely) and I was going through the transcripts and found in Episode 38 Jon: I see you *thud of him thwacking a spider as Sasha walks in * I don't know how, but with all this Web involvement, this moment seems significant.
I don’t really think this happens to the other languages
i’m fuckin sick of “2016 sucks” memes that talk about celebrities dying and not the rise of fascism
My coworkers complain when we can’t assign homework over Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. As if somehow this interferes with their ability to teach their classes.
My coworkers complain that our Muslim students get to leave class to pray Salat at noon. Like, we have maybe one Muslim student every two or three years - thus far, all extraordinarily respectful and lovely kids! - and they slip quietly out of class to pray.
My coworkers find all this infuriating. “Imagine,” they cry, “If a Christian kid asked to do that.”
I calmly explain, every single time, that a Christian kid would never HAVE to do that, because every single Christian holy day is a day off school. Good Friday. Easter Sunday. Christmas day. Our entire country interrupts its financial and educational systems - schedules its WEEKS - around the Christian prayer customs and seasons.
God forbid we temporarily unclip the rope barrier and leave an opening for someone whose religious traditions vary from our own.
I’ve been thinking, if house points are mostly awarded for scholary achivements, then how come we have never seen the house full of smarts, ravenclaw ever win the house cup? by all means, they should be trouncing the others.
my theory is that ravenclaw outdoes all the other houses both in gaining, and in losing points. they rack up all the possible points for classwork, assignments AND extra school work. But they also lose a buttload in their other pursuits of knowledge: - not returning books on time - staying in the library after hours - sneaking in the restricted section - setting up secret potion labs for RESEARCH purposes - throwing things off the tower FOR RESEARCH - throwing things into the lake FOR RESEARCH - taking small field trips into the forbidden forest to get samples and take notes on the wildlife - illegally tampering with muggle stuff FOR RESEARCH - “borrowing” school equipment and ingredients for said research - that pet kidnaping incident they never talk about that was sparked by a conversation about muggle schools “wait, you dissect frogs in class? WE SHOULD TOTALLY DO THAT TOO” - combining random spells and testing them on the student body - using said student body to test the secret potion lab’s latest creations - referring to non-ravenclaw students as test subjects in the vicinity of disapproving teachers
what I’m saying is that while the other houses may preceive ravenclaw as a group of quiet bookworms, they are actually more troublesome than the other three combined. FOR RESEARCH.
oh hey @vivid-ellipses it you
yknow if romeo had just Cried on juliets corpse for a couple hours instead of drinking poison Right Then they would have been Fine
The moral of the story is: always take time to cry for a few hours before making important decisions.
So I’m more or less being facetious here, but this is actually a thing.
Hamlet is genre savvy. Hamlet knows how Tragedies work, and he’s not going to rush in and get stabby without making absolutely certain he’s got all the facts.
Except once he thinks he has all the facts – once he’s certain that it really is the ghost of his father and Claudius really did kill him, he rushes in and stabs the wrong guy, which starts a domino line of deaths and gets Laertes embroiled in his own revenge tragedy and ultimately results in the deaths of nearly every character other than Horatio.
That’s the irony and the tragedy of the story. Hamlet knows his tropes and actively tries to avoid them, and the tropes get him anyway. It’s inevitable, the tropes are hungry.
I want a sticker that says the tropes are hungry so I can put it on my laptop
i met a scholar once who said that tragedies aren’t about a silly “flaw” or anything, it’s about having a hero who’s just in the wrong goddamn story
if hamlet swapped places with othello he wouldn’t be duped by any of iago’s shit, he’d sit down & have a good think & actually examine the facts before taking action. meanwhile in denmark, othello would have killed claudius before act 2 could even start. but instead nope, they’re both in situations where their greatest strengths are totally useless and now we’ve got all these bodies to bury.
“Check this out. This is the room where it happened. Hamilton says, ‘You gotta help me pass my financial plan.’ Jefferson goes, ‘Oh, well, ok. Come over for dinner. I’ll invite Madison. We’ll work it out.’”
Women have more power and agency in Shakespeare’s comedies than in his tragedies, and usually there are more of them with more speaking time, so I’m pretty sure what Shakespeare’s saying is “men ruin everything” because everyone fucking dies when men are in charge but when women are in charge you get married and live happily ever after
I think you’re reading too far into things, kiddo. Take a break from your women’s studies major and get some fresh air.
Right. Well, I’m a historian, so allow me to elaborate.
One of the most important aspects of the Puritan/Protestant revolution (in the 1590’s in particular) was the foregrounding of marriage as the most appropriate way of life. It often comes as a surprise when people learn this, but Puritans took an absolutely positive view of sexuality within the context of marriage. Clergy were encouraged to lead by example and marry and have children, as opposed to Catholic clergy who prized virginity above all else. Through his comedies, Shakespeare was promoting this new way of life which had never been promoted before. The dogma, thanks to the church, had always been “durr hburr women are evil sex is bad celibacy is your ticket to salvation.” All that changed in Shakespeare’s time, and thanks to him we get a view of the world where marriage, women, and sexuality are in fact the key to salvation.
The difference between the structure of a comedy and a tragedy is that the former is cyclical, and the latter a downward curve. Comedies weren’t stupid fun about the lighter side of life. The definition of a comedy was not a funny play. They were plays that began in turmoil and ended in reconciliation and renewal. They showed the audience the path to salvation, with the comic ending of a happy marriage leaving the promise of societal regeneration intact. Meanwhile, in the tragedies, there is no such promise of regeneration or salvation. The characters destroy themselves. The world in which they live is not sustainable. It leads to a dead end, with no promise of new life.
And so, in comedies, the women are the movers and shakers. They get things done. They move the machinery of the plot along. In tragedies, though women have an important part to play, they are often morally bankrupt as compared to the women of comedies, or if they are morally sound, they are disenfranchised and ignored, and refused the chance to contribute to the society in which they live. Let’s look at some examples.
In Romeo and Juliet, the play ends in tragedy because no-one listens to Juliet. Her father and Paris both insist they know what’s right for her, and they refuse to listen to her pleas for clemency. Juliet begs them – screams, cries, manipulates, tells them outright I cannot marry, just wait a week before you make me marry Paris, just a week, please and they ignore her, and force her into increasingly desperate straits, until at last the two young lovers kill themselves. The message? This violent, hate-filled patriarchal world is unsustainable. The promise of regeneration is cut down with the deaths of these children. Compare to Othello. This is the most horrifying and intimate tragedy of all, with the climax taking place in a bedroom as a husband smothers his young wife. The tragedy here could easily have been averted if Othello had listened to Desdemona and Emilia instead of Iago. The message? This society, built on racism and misogyny and martial, masculine honour, is unsustainable, and cannot regenerate itself. The very horror of it lies in the murder of two wives.
How about Hamlet? Ophelia is a disempowered character, but if Hamlet had listened to her, and not mistreated her, and if her father hadn’t controlled every aspect of her life, then perhaps she wouldn’t have committed suicide. The final scene of carnage is prompted by Laertes and Hamlet furiously grappling over her corpse. When Ophelia dies, any chance of reconciliation dies with her. The world collapses in on itself. This society is unsustainable. King Lear – we all know that this is prompted by Cordelia’s silence, her unwillingness to bend the knee and flatter in the face of tyranny. It is Lear’s disproportionate response to this that sets off the tragedy, and we get a play that is about entropy, aging and the destruction of the social order.
There are exceptions to the rule. I’m sure a lot of you are crying out “but Lady Macbeth!” and it’s a good point. However, in terms of raw power, neither Lady Macbeth nor the witches are as powerful as they appear. The only power they possess is the ability to influence Macbeth; but ultimately it is Macbeth’s own ambition that prompts him to murder Duncan, and it is he who escalates the situation while Lady Macbeth suffers a breakdown. In this case you have women who are allowed to influence the play, but do so for the worse; they fail to be the good moral compasses needed. Goneril, Regan and Gertrude are similarly comparable; they possess a measure of power, but do not use it for good, and again society cannot renew itself.
Now we come to the comedies, where women do have the most control over the plot. The most powerful example is Rosalind in As You Like It. She pulls the strings in every avenue of the plot, and it is thanks to her control that reconciliation is achieved at the end, and all end up happily married. Much Ado About Nothing pivots around a woman’s anger over the abuse of her innocent cousin. If the men were left in charge in this play, no-one would be married at the end, and it would certainly end in tragedy. But Beatrice stands up and rails against men for their cruel conduct towards women and says that famous, spine-tingling line - oh God, that I were a man! I would eat his heart in the marketplace. And Benedick, her suitor, listens to her. He realises that his misogynistic view of the world is wrong and he takes steps to change it. He challenges his male friends for their conduct, parts company with the prince, and by doing this he wins his lady’s hand. The entire happy ending is dependent on the men realising that they must trust, love and respect women. Now it is a society that it worthy of being perpetuated. Regeneration and salvation lies in equality between the sexes and the love husbands and wives cherish for each other. The Merry Wives of Windsor - here we have men learning to trust and respect their wives, Flastaff learning his lesson for trying to seduce married women, and a daughter tricking everyone so she can marry the man she truly loves. A Midsummer Night’s Dream? The turmoil begins because three men are trying to force Hermia to marry someone she does not love, and Helena has been cruelly mistreated. At the end, happiness and harmony comes when the women are allowed to marry the men of their choosing, and it is these marriages that are blessed by the fairies.
What of the romances? In The Tempest, Prospero holds the power, but it is Miranda who is the key to salvation and a happy ending. Without his daughter, it is likely Prospero would have turned into a murderous revenger. The Winter’s Tale sees Leontes destroy himself through his own jealousy. The king becomes a vicious tyrant because he is cruel to his own wife and children, and this breach of faith in suspecting his wife of adultery almost brings ruin to his entire kingdom. Only by obeying the sensible Emilia does Leontes have a chance of achieving redemption, and the pure trust and love that exists between Perdita and Florizel redeems the mistakes of the old generation and leads to a happy ending. Cymbeline? Imogen is wronged, and it is through her love and forgiveness that redemption is achieved at the end. In all of these plays, without the influence of the women there is no happy ending.
The message is clear. Without a woman’s consent and co-operation in living together and bringing up a family, there is turmoil. Equality between the sexes and trust between husbands and wives alone will bring happiness and harmony, not only to the family unit, but to society as a whole. The Taming of the Shrew rears its ugly head as a counter-example, for here a happy ending is dependent on a woman’s absolute subservience and obedience even in the face of abuse. But this is one of Shakespeare’s early plays (and a rip-off of an older comedy called The Taming of a Shrew) and it is interesting to look at how the reception of this play changed as values evolved in this society.
As early as 1611 The Shrew was adapted by the writer John Fletcher in a play called The Woman’s Prize, or The Tamer Tamed. It is both a sequel and an imitation, and it chronicles Petruchio’s search for a second wife after his disastrous marriage with Katherine (whose taming had been temporary) ended with her death. In Fletcher’s version, the men are outfoxed by the women and Petruchio is ‘tamed’ by his new wife. It ends with a rather uplifting epilogue that claims the play aimed:
To teach both sexes due equality
And as they stand bound, to love mutually.
The Taming of the Shrew and The Tamer Tamed were staged back to back in 1633, and it was recorded that although Shakespeare’s Shrew was “liked”, Fletcher’s Tamer Tamed was “very well liked.” You heard it here folks; as early as 1633 audiences found Shakespeare’s message of total female submission uncomfortable, and they preferred John Fletcher’s interpretation and his message of equality between the sexes.
So yes. The message we can take away from Shakespeare is that a world in which women are powerless and cannot or do not contribute positively to society and family is unsustainable. Men, given the power and left to their own devices, will destroy themselves. But if men and women can work together and live in harmony, then the whole community has a chance at salvation, renewal and happiness.
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
a list of my favorite pieces of roman literature that prove that the romans were just as ridiculous as us
horace’s satires 1.5: poem about horace’s road trip with his friends in which he talks about he got diarrhea and had a wet dream
horace’s epodes 3: poem whining about how much horace hates garlic
horace odes 2.13: poem whining about a tree that horace claims nearly killed him, which he proceeds to reference in several consequent poems
honestly basically any poem by horace
any of catullus’s invective, but particularly the mamurra poems: a series of poems in which catullus shits on this guy he hates politically and repeatedly calls him a literal dick
pretty much the entirety of martial’s corpus but, but particularly 7.18: a poem in which martial complains that a girl he slept with queefs too much and if she doesn’t learn to talk out her mouth and not her cooch nobody’s gonna want to sleep with he
honestly just read all of pliny the younger’s letters: letters sent to a variety of people that include all sorts of ridiculous quips and stories, in which pliny does such relatable things as calling himself lazy, getting excited about his senpai tacitus, and writing erotic cicero/tiro fanfic poetry
livy’s ab urbe condita: histories of rome that contain a ton of wild stories which, as livy himself says at the beginning, may very well just be made up but it’s not like he gives a shit
ovid amores 3.7: elegiac poetry in which ovid complains about not being able to sleep with his gf because he can’t get it up and then yells at his dick
petronius’s satyricon: a roman novel that i can only describe as a wild sexcapade
ausonius’s cento nuptialis: a cento- that is, a type of poem created by taking lines from another poem and making a new poem- created from lines of vergil that basically amounts to porn
Today is the annual Transgender Day of Remembrance.
At least 25 trans people have been murdered this year in the United States alone – internationally, it’s in the hundreds – and the majority of those we’ve lost were transgender women of color. Transphobia is not merely alive and well; it is thriving and militant. It has taken too many of us, of our brothers and sisters and siblings, away far too soon.
November 20 is set aside as a day to mourn the transgender people who have been lost to violence and hatred; it’s a day for grief and reflection. It’s also a reminder of the work we must do every other day of the year. Our knowledge of and commitment to the fight for transgender justice should not only come up each November 20. I’m talking especially to my fellow cis people: we have to do the work. All. Year. Long. It’s never been more important.
Today, we mourn. Every other day of the year, we fight like hell. Here are a few ways to get started:
Here’s a list of actions you need to take to help transgender women of color survive.
Here is a map of TDoR events taking place around the world.
Here’s information about a few fantastic groups working on behalf of trans rights who could use your time, your attention and your donations: the Trans Women of Color Collective, the National Center for Transgender Equality, Trans Student Educational Resources, Gender Spectrum, and the Sylvia Rivera Law Project. (There are so many more, so reblog and add to the list.)
Here’s a website dedicated to books by trans women.
Here’s information about the Trans Lifeline, a suicide hotline operated by and for trans people. The number, should you need it, is (877) 565-8860 in the United States and (877) 330-6366 in Canada. (They received nearly ten times their usual call traffic after the election, so if you have money to donate, they could use it, too.)
Here’s a great read from Janet Mock on why TDoR is not the be-all-end-all of activism around trans issues.
And here are some always-relevant affirmations and wisdom from Laverne Cox. Bookmark them for any day of the year.
hello tumblr,
a beloved friend of mine is doing a good project at their work that involves Young Adult fiction and asked me to ask you for help finding YA writers (preferably British, and definitely still living) who are writing books about kids Going Through Some Shit - the shit can be occurring while they fight magical statues or whatever, which is the beauty of YA, but we’re looking for books that involve children/teenagers dealing with difficult or bad real life stuff
I’m always looking for more books like this anyway so I’m releasing this into the void in the hope that it will return to me with recommendations I can pass along to her and also read. please reblog this outwards if you can! we would really really appreciate any suggestions from anyone<3
All of the Above by Juno Dawson - many things, including sexuality discovering, self harm, and eating disorders
The City’s Son, The Glass Republic, and Our Lady of the Streets by Tom Pollock- fantasy, but also islamophobia and sexual assault