From Wonder Tales from Russia by Jeremiah Curtin, 1921.

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From Wonder Tales from Russia by Jeremiah Curtin, 1921.
There should be a form of closed captioning for faceblind people where the person's name hovers above their heads. Which would also be good for people who have trouble remembering names.
I swear I'd make the Shinigami eye deal just to stop being confused all the time.
Me, looking through the Lady of Avalon’s profile again: Despite her being inhuman herself, her vanity tself is something many consider human due to it being a flaw and how tragedy can befall because of it. Someone truly inhuman may still be a lovely figure, her pride in lavishing those she oversees with gifts and motherly affection stop her from becoming totally inhumane as she is doing it both for them and herself. While she may have been a human child she is inhuman as an adult and considers humanity an entirely different being to herself, and yet she is still that same human girl who was taken in to become the next queen and thus is still human even if she does not consider herself as such.
Also me, seeing any picture of her: Pretty lady
From Les Fiancees Merveilleuses, 1916.
From the University of Wisconsin's 1917 yearbook.
From The Russian Story Book by Richard Wilson, 1916.
An illustration from an 1881 issue of Cornhill magazine. The caption reads: "They always fly at me, and nobody else."
"An enormous white wolfhound bounded out upon the path." From The Crystal Ball by Mary Daniel Gordon, 1920.