The waiters
#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers






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The waiters
WHAT IS HE DOING ..????
The Washington ask blog died, Burr killed two people, then himself, came back in 2 different timelines and fucked around and went awol in one of them. I mean shit dude, which ask blog is next 👁️👁️
Is Theodosia gonna go missing…? Surely not. … UNLESS
se alejan cositas para la época navideña (?) Ok no sé, posiblemente salga lo que sea que haga más para año nuevo o el año que viene, pero el tema de navidad es de mis clichés favoritos.
Todavía no me saco de la cabeza el hecho de que estoy shipeando revolucionarios gays, déjenme procesarlo.
In christmas I'm going to bring you some new virgin shit. Ok idk, but whatever I do will probably be posted like in new year or January/February
I still can not take out of my mind the fact that I'm shiping american gay revolutionaries, let me get over it.
Is it too obvious that I don't like drawing backgrounds/plants?
No aaron it doesn't work like that.
Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) was an American lawyer, statesman, philosopher, and a Founding Father of the United States. A prominent figure of the American Revolution, he wrote the Declaration of Independence and later served as the first secretary of state, the second vice president, and the third president of the United States (served 1801-1809).
Early Life
Thomas Jefferson was born on 13 April 1743 at Shadwell Plantation in Albemarle County, Virginia. He was the third of ten children born to Peter Jefferson, a wealthy planter and land surveyor, and Jane Randolph Jefferson, a daughter of one of Virginia's most influential families. When Peter Jefferson died in 1757, 14-year-old Thomas inherited 5,000 acres of land as well as 60 enslaved people. From 1758 to 1760, he was privately tutored by Reverend James Maury before going on to the colonial capital of Williamsburg to attend the College of William & Mary. In his first year at college, he spent lavishly on parties, horses, and clothing, but he would soon regret this "showy style of living" (Boles, 18). His second year, therefore, was much more studious; he would apparently spend 15 hours a day at his studies, pausing only to exercise or to practice his violin.
The studious Jefferson soon became the protégé of mathematics professor William Small, who he would fondly remember as "the first truly enlightened or scientific man" he had ever met (Boles, 17). Small introduced Jefferson to the two other great intellectuals in Williamsburg – law professor George Wythe and Lt. Governor Francis Fauquier – and, at their weekly dinner parties, the four men would discuss politics and philosophy, greatly influencing the young Jefferson's political and intellectual development.
After completing his formal studies in 1762, Jefferson remained in Williamsburg to study law under Wythe and was admitted to the Virginia bar five years later in 1767. In 1768, he was elected to the House of Burgesses, representing Albemarle County. That same year, he began construction of a new home atop an 868-foot-high (265 m) mountain that overlooked his plantation. Called Monticello – Italian for "little mountain" – the house became the passion of Jefferson's life, and he would spend the next several decades designing and renovating it. The actual labor, of course, was mostly performed by his slaves; over the course of his lifetime, Jefferson owned approximately 600 enslaved people, most of whom were born into slavery on his property.
In 1772, after several failed romantic pursuits, Jefferson was finally married to the beautiful young widow Martha Wayles Skelton. Five years his junior, Martha shared his passions for literature and music; indeed, they often played music together – she on the harpsichord, he on the violin. The couple would have six children, only two of whom – Martha 'Patsy' (1772-1836) and Mary 'Polly' (1778-1804) – would survive to adulthood. When Jefferson's father-in-law died in 1773, he and Martha inherited 11,000 acres of land and 135 more enslaved people. By then, Jefferson had become involved with Virginia's struggle against Great Britain. Parliament's attempts to tax the colonists without their consent were vehemently opposed by the American Patriots, who saw such taxes as violations of their 'rights as Englishmen'. In 1774, Jefferson argued as much in his A Summary View of the Rights of British America. In it, he asserted that the colonies had the right to govern themselves, that they were tied to the English king only through voluntary bonds and that Parliament had no right to interfere in their affairs. This work earned him recognition as a Patriot leader in Virginia and led to his appointment as a delegate to the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia in the spring of 1775.
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Omg!! A still drawing :) The basic gist of this is that Hermes and Apollo have been dating for a few months and neither knew the other was a dad…until they bumped into each other at the park. Hermes is holding a tiny itty bitty baby Odysseus (I don't draw babies so sorry if he looks…odd)
And Apollo has a hand on his son, Alexander Hamilton’s Shoulder.
That is all :)
ENJOY.
The Full Image ^
Broken Down Comic ^
No Words ^