bigdearworld
bigdearworld
an attempt at a studyblr
296 posts
August | she/her | 19 | follows/likes from @they-didnt-last
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941), poem 85 from “The Gardener”, 1914 Translated by the author from the original Bengali. New York: The Macmillan Company.
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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“People are inherently terrible” no!!! Have you ever seen a child wait for their friend while they tie their shoelaces? Have you ever known someone who would bring hurt squirrels and rabbits and mice to the nearest vet just so it doesn’t suffer? Have you seen someone grieve? Have you ever read something that hit your heart like a freight train? Have you looked at the stars and felt an unexplainable joy? Have you ever baked bread? Have you shared a meal with a friend? Have you not seen it? All the love? All the good? I know it’s hard to see sometimes, I know there’s pain everywhere. But look, there’s a child helping another up after a hard fall. Look, there’s someone giving their umbrella to a stranger. Look, there’s someone admiring the spring flowers. Look, there’s good, there’s good, there’s good. Look!!!!
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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Guys.
Y’all.
I…
I just. I just… i have discovered something. And I have laughed too much. I have laughed every time I have tried to explain it to someone. I cannot get through this.
Look. Okay.
There are two things you need to know, here.
First: There’s a style of Greek pottery that was popular during the Hellenic period, for which most of the surviving examples are from southern Italy. We call them ‘fish plates’ because, well, they’re plates, and they’re decorated with fish (and other marine life).
Like this one, currently in the Met:
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Or this one, currently in the Cleveland Museum of Art:
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They’re very cool. We’re not 100% sure what they were for, because most of the surviving ones were found as grave goods, but that’s a different post.
The second thing you need to know is that when we (Classics/archaeology/whatever as a discipline) have a collection of artefacts, like vases, sculptures, paintings, etc. and we do not know the name of the artist, but we’re pretty sure one artist made X, Y and Z artefacts, we come up with a name for that artist. There are a whole bunch of things that could be the source for the name, e.g. where we found most of their work (The Dipylon Master) or the potter with whom they worked (the Amasis Painter), a favourite theme (The Athena Painter), the Museum that ended up with the most famous thing they did (The Berlin Painter) or a notable aspect of their style. Like, say, The Eyebrow Painter.
Guess what kind of pottery the Eyebrow Painter made?
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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Ilya Kaminsky, from "Musica Humana", Dancing in Odessa: Poems
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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my perfect essay would be one single 1500-3000 words long sentence. this is my beauty ideal for essays
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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It has come to my attention that young royals fandom, heartstopper fandom and rwrb fandom are anti each other on Twitter like???? I thought that we all were one big family.
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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yes I DO live under a rock and her name is the Moon and she is always smiling but she teaches me nothing
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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i just finished reading one last stop and i desperately need casey mcquiston to stop writing such relatable characters, august and wes were personal attacks
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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milk-thistle is an example of a word where the tongue barely moves… basilica is an example of a word where the movement involved is like a seesaw. opium as a word is circular to say. to say a word like violence involves a bit of a forced pause in the mouth where the o connecting the syllables is. etymologists trace the word’s history, poets feel the word’s impact, singers listen to the word’s musicality, linguists tell the word to go this way and that way, and the word is gracious to all in return
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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negative self talk "im going to die here" vs positive self talk "im going to start killing"
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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dandelions are magic. literally tiny suns in the grass that turn into the moon and then the stars when you blow on them. fucking insane.
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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Your sixth most recent emoji is how your guardian angel feels about you
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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not all of it is bad i think….…. we are going to be okay i think.
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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i wish there were more than 24 hours in a day and beverages were $1 and growing up didn’t hurt so much
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bigdearworld · 2 years ago
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Basic rules for analysing fiction, an incomprehensive list jotted down in a hurry:
The protagonist isn’t always right
The protagonist isn’t always good
The protagonist isn’t always written to be relatable or likeable
The narrator isn’t always right
The narrator isn’t always good
The narrator isn’t always telling the truth
The narrator isn’t always the author
The protagonist’s moral compass, the narrator’s moral compass and the author’s moral compass are three entirely different things that only occasionally overlap
Pay attention to what characters do and not just what they say
Pay special attention when what the characters do is at odds with what they say
A lot of the time the curtains are blue for a reason. If they aren’t, you should read better books
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