These tattoos and this lot by @simpeachie 💕

seen from Sweden
seen from China

seen from Russia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Russia
seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from South Korea
seen from Ukraine
seen from China
seen from France
seen from United States

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

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Philippines
These tattoos and this lot by @simpeachie 💕
byldell on ig (09.12.2018)
hardworking hobi
YOU'RE LITERALLY MAKING ME TEAR UP BECAUSE OF YOUR TAGS AND J JUST LOVE YOU SO MUCH ANGEL THANK YOU FOR BELIEVING IN ME🥺🤧
NOW IM GONNA CRY!!! NOEMI YOU ARE THE SWEETEST PERSON ON THIS PLANET I— YOU ARE INCREDIBLE AND I LOVE YOU AND YOU DESERVE EVERYTHING GOOD IN THE WORLD 🥺🥺🥰🥰❤️
LEJLA THAT TAG 🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺
it’s the truth. tumblr doesn’t want me to see them but that doesn’t stop me from checking ur blog everyday 🤭
[Sumner’s] speaking was noted for its ‘great degree of earnestness, with an entire freedom from any effort to make a dash.’ Other students, who trembled at the thought of having to speak publicly, stood in awe of Sumner’s seeming ease and self-possession on declamation days, and thought it only natural that, at his junior exhibition in 1829, Sumner should choose the part of the Orator in a Greek dialogue and defend his superiority over other professions with great rhetorical gusto. Sumner was not so much interested in oratory, however, as he was in reading. He was proud that his native facility allowed him to finish his assignments in short order and thus have extra time, not to rewrite and perfect his themes, but hungrily to acquire new knowledge. He took out more books from the library than any other student in his freshman year, and, by the time of graduation, ‘[n]o student … had read as widely.’
Young Charles Sumner by Anne-Marie Taylor