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#charles seton
the-birth-of-art · 8 months
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11/1/73: McGaw Memorial Hall, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL
photo by Charles Seton
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Modern Saint Bracket Announcement
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Instead of waiting until Sunday, the modern bracket will open immediately after the post-schism bracket is over. This is the modern bracket, which will be followed by a final four, and then there will be even MORE polls (losers' brackets, Marian apparitions, we're going all summer baby.)
Catholic Saint Tournament Modern Bracket Round 1 Pairings:
St Therese of Lisieux vs St Elizabeth Ann Seton
St Padre Pio (of Pietrelcina) vs St Charles de Foucauld
St Maximilian Kolbe vs St Benilde Romancon
St John Bosco vs St John Neumann
St Mother Teresa (of Calcutta) vs St Arnold Janssen
St Jacinta Marto vs St Edith Stein
St Maria Goretti vs St Marianne Cope
St Charles Lwanga (& co) vs St John Vianney
St Oscar Romero vs St Josemaria Escriva
St Bernadette vs St Damian of Molokai
St Faustina vs St Catherine Laboure
St Mary MacKillop vs St Katharine Drexel
St Gemma Galgani vs St Frances Xavier Cabrini
St John Henry Cardinal Newman vs Pope St John Paul II
Pope St John XXIII vs St Mark Ji Tianxiang
St Francisco Marto vs Sts Louis & Zelie Martin (package deal)
You can still submit nominations for beatified folks, propaganda for your favorite saints, or other thoughts in the ask box! Or suggestions for future polls, questions, etc.
May the best saint win!
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mariocki · 6 months
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Murders in the Zoo (1933)
"Mr. Yates, never be afraid of a wild animal. Let it alone and it will leave you alone. That's more than you can say of most humans."
"You don't mean to say you really like these beasts?"
"I love them. Their honesty, their simplicity, their primitive emotions: they love, they hate, they kill."
#murders in the zoo#snake#american cinema#pre code film#1933#horror film#a. edward sutherland#philip wylie#seton i. miller#milton herbert gropper#lionel atwill#charles ruggles#gail patrick#randolph scott#john lodge#kathleen burke#harry beresford#edward mcwade#inspired pre code nastiness‚ right out the gate: opens on Atwill sewing shut the mouth of a romantic reveal and leaving him bound in the#jungle for the lions and consistently hits those levels of onscreen horror which wouldn't be seen again for several decades#i mean i wasn't expecting to actually SEE the results of Atwill's grisly surgery‚ nor an unfortunate being devoured by crocodiles but there#they are! Atwill of course is his usual magnetic self‚ managing to give a surprisingly controlled performance despite the largeness of the#part as written. the astonishingly beautiful Kathleen Burke does what she can with an underwritten part (and billed in publicity as the#Panther Women‚ following her star making turn in similarly shocking pre code Island of Lost Souls) but Charlie Ruggles' comic relief takes#quite a bit of goodwill to warm up to (i got there in the end‚ but his character really belongs in a different film entirely)#Randolph Scott's young romantic lead hasn't very much to do but it's nice to see him outside of a cowboy hat for once#my only real reservation is that you know all those animals were probably having a really bad time :(#such is the risk of 90 year old cinema i guess#still this was fun; and contrary to popular belief not a Universal film‚ but a Paramount one (only owned by Universal after they bought a#ton of Paramount's back catalogue)
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housewilson · 10 days
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A MASTERLIST OF ALL THE BOOKS I COULD FIND IN TIM'S BOOKSHELVES
As someone who basically sees Tim Laughlin as my own version of Jesus Christ (I kind of wish I was lying but I have a 'beyond measure' tattoo branding my skin so perhaps I'm entirely serious), I simply needed to know what was on those shelves of his. And this was a hard task to achieve, believe me... but I got much farther than I initially thought I would.
(I've got so much to say about all of these books and how they might string together to create a deeper understanding of Tim as a character but I won't go into it here... maybe in a future post or video essay, who knows).
If you wish to help a girl out and attempt to figure out any of the other books I simply can not crack no matter how I look at the screenshots and mess with the adjustments... here's a folder full of 2k sized screenshots of those shelves.
Before I list the books one by one, I want to make a couple observations:
1) Almost all of the books I was able to pinpoint are non-fiction. The ones that aren't are children's books.
2) Topically, we see an interdisciplinary interest in:
History: from a book on a king in 4BC, to a survey of landholding in England in the 11th century.
Somewhat current historical events: books on World War I and II.
Western Philosophers: specially from the 16th to the 18th century.
Aesthetics: there's at least 2 books on the subject matter, but I couldn't find the second one, sadly.
Spirituality: not only christian/catholic; some of these books touch on Eastern practices such as Buddhism and Hinduism.
Fairy tales / children's books.
Psychology: specially in regards to mysticism and sexuality.
Science and scientific discovery/research.
3) A lot of the history, current events, and spirituality books are autobiographies/memoirs.
4) A lot of books (specially those on sciences and philosophy) tend to be more so anthologies or overviews on a subject matter rather than a book written by one specific author on one very concrete topic.
Overall, this all reflects very well an idea Jonathan Bailey himself expressed in a brilliant interview you can watch here if you haven't yet:
"Tim has buddhist flags in his 1980s flat in San Francisco, he has crystals, he is someone who is always seeking other ways to understand human experience. Which is probably tiring for him. Throughout the decades, he sort of appears as completely different people. At the crux of it there's this extreme grinding, contrasting, aggressive duality between feeling lovable and not feeling lovable. There's such shame in Tim. But it's the push and the pull which keeps him alive.”
This desire to understand human psychology, spirituality, and the ways of the universe through as many diverse lenses as possible, as well as a predilection for non-fiction, expresses very much to me that insatiable thirst for truth that defines his character so strongly.
OKAY, THAT BEING SAID. Here's the list in chronological order of publication.
PS. if you decided to click on any of the following titles it'd definitely not take you to a google drive link of the pdf file where you could download and read these books for yourself. Because that would be illegal and wrong.
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Journeys through Bookland by Charles H. Sylvester (1901?) (1922 Edition)
I don't know which specific volume he owns, sorry, I tried my best but the number is not discernible (hell, the title barely is). If anyone wants the download link to these hmu because I'm not about to individually download all 10 right now.
10 volumes of poems, myths, Bible stories, fairy tales, and excerpts from children's novels, as well as a guide to the series. It has been lauded as ‘a new and original plan for reading, applied to the world’s best literature for children.’
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Pilgrimage by Graham Seton Hutchison (1936)
This book provides a view of the battlefields of WW I through the eyes of the average fighting man. 
One curious thing about this book is that it's author, a British First World War army officer and military theorist, went on to become a fascist activist later in his life. Straight from Wikipedia:
"Seton Hutchison became a celebrated figure in military circles for his tactical innovations during the First World War but would later become associated with a series of fringe fascist movements which failed to capture much support even by the standards of the far right in Britain in the interbellum period." He made a contribution to First World War fiction with his espionage novel, The W Plan."
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The Seven Storey Mountain by Thomas Merton (1948) 
The Seven Storey Mountain tells of the growing restlessness of a brilliant and passionate young man, who at the age of twenty-six, takes vows in one of the most demanding Catholic orders—the Trappist monks. At the Abbey of Gethsemani, "the four walls of my new freedom," Thomas Merton struggles to withdraw from the world, but only after he has fully immersed himself in it. At the abbey, he wrote this extraordinary testament, a unique spiritual autobiography that has been recognized as one of the most influential religious works of our time. Translated into more than twenty languages, it has touched millions of lives.
This book requires no introduction. It's the one he keeps the Fire Island's postcard in and the one we see him re-reading in episode 8 after Hawk brings it to the hospital with him at the end of episode 7.
Just a little detail I noticed:
Apparently he liked the book so much he visited Gethsemani, which was the home of its author all the way up till 1968.
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For all we know, he might have even met its author!
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Sexual Behavior in the Human Male by Alfred Charles Kinsey, Wardell B. Pomeroy (1948)
When published in 1948 this volume encountered a storm of condemnation and acclaim. It is, however, a milestone on the path toward a scientific approach to the understanding of human sexual behavior. Dr. Alfred C. Kinsey and his fellow researchers sought to accumulate an objective body of facts regarding sex. They employed first hand interviews to gather this data. This volume is based upon histories of approximately 5,300 males which were collected during a fifteen year period. This text describes the methodology, sampling, coding, interviewing, statistical analyses, and then examines factors and sources of sexual outlet.
Yes, Charles Kinsey is indeed behind the Kinsey scale that has done so much for the LGBTQ+ community.
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Their Finest Hour (1949), The Grand Alliance (1950), and Closing the Ring (1951) by Winston Churchill
Winston Churchill's six-volume history of the cataclysm that swept the world remains the definitive history of the Second World War. Lucid, dramatic, remarkable both for its breadth and sweep and for its sense of personal involvement, it is universally acknowledged as a magnificent reconstruction and is an enduring, compelling work that led to his being awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1953. 
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The European Philosophers from Descartes to Nietzsche by Monroe C. Beardsley (1960)
In so far as we reflect upon ourselves and our world, and what we are doing in it, says the editor of this anthology, we are all philosophers. And therefore we are very much concerned with what the twelve men represented in this book--the major philosophers on the Continent of Europe--have to say to us, to help us build our own philosophy, to think things out in our own way. For the issues that we face today are partly determined by the work of thinkers of earlier generations, and no other time is more important to the development of Western thought than is the 250-year period covered by this anthology. Monroe. C. Beardsley, Professor of Philosophy at Swarthmore College, has chosen major works, or large selections from them, by each man, with supplementary passages to amplify or clarify important points. These include: Descartes - Discourse on Method (Descartes), Thoughts (Pascal), The Nature of Evil (Spinoza), The Relation Between Soul and Body (Leibniz), The Social Construct (Rousseau), Critique of Pure Reason (Kant), The Vocation of Man (Fichte), Introducciton to the Philosophy of History (Hegel), The World as Will and Idea (Schopenhauer), A General View of Positivism (Comte), The Analysis of Sensations and the Relation of the Physical to the Psychical (Mach), Beyond Good and Evil (Nietzsche).
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The New Intelligent Man's Guide to Science by Isaac Asimov (1965)
Asimov tells the stories behind the science: the men and women who made the important discoveries and how they did it. Ranging from Galilei, Achimedes, Newton and Einstein, he takes the most complex concepts and explains it in such a way that a first-time reader on the subject feels confident on his/her understanding. Assists today's readers in keeping abreast of all recent discoveries and advances in physics, the biological sciences, astronomy, computer technology, artificial intelligence, robotics, and other sciences.
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The Heavenly City of the 18th Philosophers by Carl L. Becker (1932) (1962 reprint)
Here a distinguished American historian challenges the belief that the eighteenth century was essentially modern in its temper. In crystalline prose Carl Becker demonstrates that the period commonly described as the Age of Reason was, in fact, very far from that; that Voltaire, Hume, Diderot, and Locke were living in a medieval world, and that these philosophers “demolished the Heavenly City of St. Augustine only to rebuild it with more up-to-date materials.” In a new foreword, Johnson Kent Wright looks at the book’s continuing relevance within the context of current discussion about the Enlightenment.
I find the particular choice of adding this book very curious and on brand, since it explores the idea that philosophers of the Enlightenment very much resembled religious dogma/faith in their structure and purpose. Just... A+ of the props department to not just add any kind of book on philosophy anthology.
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Herod The Great by Michael Grant (1971)
The Herod of popular tradition is the tyrannical King of Judaea who ordered the Massacre of the Innocents and died a terrible death in 4 BC as the judgment of God. But this biography paints a much more complex picture of this contemporary of Mark Antony, Cleopatra, and the Emperor Augustus. Herod devoted his life to the task of keeping the Jews prosperous and racially intact. To judge by the two disastrous Jewish rebellions that occurred within a hundred and fifty years of his death -- those the Jews called the First and Second Roman Wars -- he was not, in the long run, completely successful. For forty years Herod walked the most precarious of political tightropes. For he had to be enough of a Jew to retain control of his Jewish subjects, and enough of a pro-Roman to preserve the confidence of Rome, within whose territory his kingdom fell. For more than a quarter of a century he was one of the chief bulwarks of Augustus' empire in the east. He made Judaea a large and prosperous country. He founded cities and built public works on a scale never seen before: of these, recently excavated Masada is a spectacular example. And he did all this in spite of a continuous undercurrent of protest and underground resistance. The numerous illustrations presents portraits and coins, buildings and articles of everyday use, landscapes and fortresses, and subsequent generations' interpretations of the more famous events, actual and mythical, of Herod's career.
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Readings in the Philosophy of Art and Aesthetics compiled by Milton Charles Nahm (1975)
A college level comprehensive anthology of essays written on the arts and the field of aesthetic philosophy.
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The Mustard Seed: Discourses on the Sayings of Jesus Taken from the Gospel According to Thomas by Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (1975)
This timely book explores the wisdom of the Gnostic Jesus, who challenges our preconceptions about the world and ourselves. Based on the Gospel of Thomas, the book recounts the missing years in Jesus’ life and his time in Egypt and India, learning from Egyptian secret societies, then Buddhist schools, then Hindu Vedanta. Each of Jesus' original sayings is the "seed" for a chapter of the book; each examines one aspect of life — birth, death, love, fear, anger, and more — counterpointed by Osho’s penetrating comments and responses to questions from his audience.
(You don't know how fulfilling it was to find some of these books and just sit there like "oh my god, yessss, he'd SO read that".)
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A Third Testament by Malcolm Muggeridge (1976)
A modern pilgrim explores the spiritual wanderings of Augustine, Pascal, Blake, Kierkegaard, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and Bonhoeffer. A Third Testament brings to life seven men whose names are familiar enough, but whose iconoclastic spiritual wanderings make for unforgettable reading. Muggeridge's concise biographies are an accessible and manageable introduction to these spiritual giants who carried on the testament to the reality of God begun in the Old and New Testaments. - St. Augustine, a headstrong young hedonist and speechwriter who turned his back on money and prestige in order to serve Christ - Blaise Pascal, a brilliant mathematician who pursued scientific knowledge but warned people against thinking they could live without God - William Blake, a magnificent artist-poet who pled passionately for the life of the spirit and warned of the blight that materialism would usher in - Soren Kierkegaard, a renegade philosopher who spent most of his life at odds with the church, and insisted that every person must find his own way to God - Fyodor Dostoevsky, a debt-ridden writer and sometime prisoner who found, in the midst of squalor and political turmoil, the still small voice of God - Leo Tolstoy, a grand old novelist who swung between idealism and depression, loneliness and fame and a duel awareness of his sinfulness and God s grace - Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a pastor whose writings and agonized involvement in a plot to kill Hitler cost him his life, but continue to inspire millions
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Portraits: The photography of Carl Van Vechten (1978)
Can't find a file but you can borrow it from archive.com in the link provided.
During his career as a photographer, Carl Van Vechten’s subjects, many of whom were his friends and social acquaintances, included dancers, actors, writers, artists, activists, singers, costumiers, photographers, social critics, educators, journalists, and aesthetes. [...] As a promoter of literary talent and a critic of dance, theater, and opera, Carl Van Vechten was as interested in the cultural margin as he was in the day’s most acclaimed and successful people. His diverse subjects give a sense of both Carl Van Vechten’s interests and his considerable role in defining the cultural landscape of the twentieth century; among his many sitters one finds the leading lights of the Harlem Renaissance, the premier actors and writers of the American stage, the world’s greatest opera stars and ballerinas, the most important and influential writers of the day, among many others.
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Report of the Shroud of Turin by John H Heller (1983)
Heller, while a man of science, was nevertheless a devout man (Southern Baptist). He viewed his task concerning The Shroud with great scepticism; there have been far too many hoaxes in the world of religion. The book describes in great detail the events leading up to the team's conviction that the Shroud was genuine; last - not least - being Heller and Adler's verification of "heme" (blood) and the inexplicable "burned image" of the crucified man. Although carbon dating indicates that the image is not 2000 years old and that the cloth is from the Middle Ages, there is not enough evidence to disprove Heller's assertion that the Shroud is indeed genuine.
Context for those who may not know (though I doubt it's necessary): The shroud of Turin "is a length of linen cloth that bears a faint image of the front and back of a man. It has been venerated for centuries, especially by members of the Catholic Church, as the actual burial shroud used to wrap the body of Jesus of Nazareth after his crucifixion, and upon which Jesus's bodily image is miraculously imprinted."
It is a very controversial subject matter and I definitely don't know that from going to an Opus Dei school since the day I was born till the day I graduated high school.
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Mysticism, Psychology and Oedipus by Israel Regardie (1985)
I've tried my hardest but despite many Israel Regardie books being on the world wide web, I can't find a copy of this specific one.
Mysticism, Psychology and Oedipus, from the Small Gems series is one of these mysterious alchemys which Regardie and Spiegelman crafted for the serious student of mysticism. Mysticism, Psychology and Oedipus by Dr. Israel Regardie and his friend, world renowned Jungian Psychologist, J. Marvin Spiegelman, Ph.D. was created to reach the serious student at the intersecting paths of magic, mysticism and psychology. While each area of study overlaps they also maintain their own individual paths of truth. One of Regardie’s greatest gifts was his rare ability to combine these difficult and diverse subjects and make them understandable.
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Domesday Book Through Nine Centuries by Elizabeth M. Hallam (1986)
In 1086 a great survey of landholding in England was carried out on the orders of William the Conqueror, and its results were recorded in the two volumes, which, within less than a century, were to acquire the name of Domesday, or the Book of Judgment 'because its decisions, like those of the last Judgment, are unalterable'. This detailed survey of the kingdom, unprecedented at that time in its scope, gives us an extraordinarily vivid impression of the life of the eleventh century.
The following two are a fuck up on the props department part because they were published after 1987 but we'll forgive them because they were not expecting for me to do all this to figure out the titles of these books, I'm sure:
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The One Who Set Out to Study Fear by Peter Redgrove (1989)
This book barely exists physically, rest assured it does not exist online... LOL.
The author of The Wise Wound presents here a re-telling of Grimm's famous fairy tales, written in a manner and spirit more suited to the present day. Each story is rooted in the original, but cast in an energetic style that is both disrespectful and humorous. 
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Essential Papers on Masochism by Margaret Ann Fitzpatrick Hanly (1995)
The contested psychoanalytic concept of masochism has served to open up pathways into less-explored regions of the human mind and behavior. Here, rituals of pain and sexual abusiveness prevail, and sometimes gruesome details of unconscious fantasies are constructed out of psychological pain, desperate need, and sexually excited, self- destructive violence. In this significant addition to the "Essential Papers in Psychoanalysis" series, Margaret Ann Fitzpatrick Hanly presents an anthology of the most outstanding writings in the psychoanalytic study of masochism. In bringing these essays together, Dr. Fitzpatrick Hanly expertly combines classic and contemporary theories by the most respected scholars in the field to create a varied and integrated volume. This collection features papers by S. Nacht, R. Loewenstein, Victor Smirnoff, Sigmund Freud, Jacques Laplanche, Robert Bak, Leonard Shengold, K. Novick, J. Novick, S. Coen, Margaret Brenman, Esther Menaker, S. Lorand, M. Balint, Bernhard Berliner, Charles Brenner, Helene Deutsch, Annie Reich, Marie Bonaparte, Jessica Benjamin, S.L. Olinick, Arnold Modell, Betty Joseph, and Janine Chasseguet-Smirgel.
Let's not forget another book we know has been present in his shelves at some point:
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Look Homeward, Angel by Thomas Wolfe (1929)
It is Wolfe's first novel, and is considered a highly autobiographical American coming-of-age story. The character of Eugene Gant is generally believed to be a depiction of Wolfe himself. The novel briefly recounts Eugene's father's early life, but primarily covers the span of time from Eugene's birth in 1900 to his definitive departure from home at the age of 19. The setting is a fictionalization of his home town of Asheville, North Carolina, called Altamont in the novel.
And Ron Nyswaner mentioned in a podcast (might be this one? I'm not sure) that he scrapped from the script a line where Tim recommends this poem at some point:
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He specially emphasized the line "If equal affection cannot be, Let the more loving one be me".
And lastly, if anyone wanted to know:
His copy of the bible is the Revised Standard Version by Thomas Nelson from either 1952 or 1953.
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Because why the hell not figure out what specific translation of the holy bible a fictional character was basing his beliefs on — as if the set designers cared nearly as much as I do.
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Xenofiction (& similar) Media Masterpost
Editable Google Doc Link here
PS. This list is for keeping track only. This is not a recommendation list and I won't be advocating for any Work, Author or Company listed. There will be footnotes about a work/author for undesirable behaviour or themes if necessary.
This is a WIP and will be updated whenever I have the time to. Feel free to recommend works or inform me about an author so I can update the post. Be Aware works on this list might have been cancelled or on indifinitive Hiatus and not all works are available on English.
Sections:
Literature
Comic Books & Graphics Novels
Picture Books
Indie Written Works
Webcomics
Manga
Animated Series
Live-Action & Hybrid shows
Webseries
Short Films
Animated Films
Live Action & CGI Assisted Movies
Documentary
Theather
Videogames
Online Browser Games
Table Top Games
Music
Other Online Projects
Youtubers
Gen. Videos
Worlds
Franchises
To search is Ctrl + F (Windows) or Command-F (MacOS), on phone browser you have "Find in page" (Drop menu at top right)
Literature
A
Age of Fire - E. E. Knight
Adventure Lit their Star - Kenneth Allsop
Alien in a Small Town - Jim Cleaveland
Alien Chronicles (Literature) - Deborah Chester
Animal Farm - George Orwell
Animorphs - K. A. Applegate
Am an Owl - Martin Hocke
At Winters End - Robert Silverberg
Avonoa - H.R.B. Collotzi
Astrid and Cerulean: A Parrot Fantasy - Parasol Marshall-Crowley
A Wolf for a Spell - Karah Sutton
The African Painted Wolf Novels - Alexander Kendziorski
The Alchemist's Cat - Robin Jarvis
The Amazing Maurice and his educated rodents - Terry Pratchet
The Amity Incident - C. M. Weller
The Ancient Solitary Reign - Martin Hocke
The Animals of Farthing Wood series - Colin Dann
The Art of Racing in the Rain - Garth Stein
The Author of Acacia Seeds and Other Extracts from the Journal of Therolinguistics - Ursula K. Le Guin
A Magical Cat Named Kayla: Whiskers of Enchantment -Carlos Juárez [AI Cover]*
The Animal Story Book - Various Authors [Editor: Andrew Lang]
Abenteuer im Korallenriff - Antonia Michaelis [DE]
B
Bambi: A life in the forest & Bambi Children - Felix Salten
Bamboo Kingdom series - Erin Hunter
Bazil Broketail - Christopher Rowley
Beak of the Moon & Dark of the Moon - Philip Temple
Bears of the Ice series - Kathryn Lasky
Beasts of New York - Jon Evans
Beautiful Joe - Margaret Marshall Saunders
Beyond Acacia Ridge - Amy Clare Fontaine
Birddom - Clive Woodall
Bird Brain - Guy Kennaway
Black Beauty - Anna Sewell
Blitzcat - Robert Westall
Blizzard Winds - Paul Koch
Books of the Raksura - Martha Wells
Braver: A Wombat's Tale - Suzanne Selfors & Walker Ranson
Bravelands series- Erin Hunter
Broken Fang - Rutherford Montgomery
Bunnicula series - Deborah Howe & James Howe
Burning Stars - Rurik Redwolf
A Black Fox Running - Brian Carter
A Blue So Loud - Tuesday
The Ballard of The Belstone Fox - David Rook
The Bear - James Curwood
The Bees - Laline Paull
The Biography of a Silver Fox - Ernest Thompson Seton
The Blue Cat of Castle Town - Catherine Cate Coblentz
The Book Of Chameleons - José Eduardo Agualusa
The Book of the Dun Cow - Walter Wangerin Jr.
The Book of Night with Moon - Diane Duane
The Books of the Named series - Clare Bell
The Bug Wars - Robert Asprin
The Builders - Daniel Polansky
C
Call of the wild - Jack London
Callanish - William Horwood
Catwings - Ursula K. Le Guin
Cat Diaries: Secret Writings of the MEOW Society - Betsy Byars, Betsy Duffey & Laurie Myers
Cat House - Michael Peak
Cat Pack - Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
Cats in the city of Plague - A.L Marlow
Celestial Heir series - Chester Young
Charlotte's Web - E. B. White
Chet and Bernie mysteries - Spencer Quinn
Chia The Wildcat - Joyce stranger
Child of the Wolves - Elizabeth Hall
Clarice the Brave - Lisa McMann
Cry of the Wild - Charles Foster
Coyote's Wild Home - Barbara Kingsolver; Lily Kingsolver & Paul Mirocha
Coyote Series - Michael Bergey
Crocuta - Katelyn Rushe
Coorinna: A Novel of the Tasmanian Uplands - Erle Wilson
Cujo - Steven King
The Calatians Series - Tim Susman
The Cats of Roxville station - Jean Craighead Georde
The Chanur Novels - C. J. Cherryh
The Cold Moons - Aeron Clement
The Color of Distance || Through Alien Eyes - Amy Thomson
The Conquerors - Timothy Zahn
The Council of Cats - R. J. F.
The Cricket in Times Square - George Selden
The Crimson Torch - Angela Holder
The Crossbreed - Allan Eckert
The Crucible of Time - John Brunner
D
Darkeye series - Lydia West
Deadlands: The Hunted - Skye Melki-Wegner
Demon of Undoing - Andrea I. Alton
Desert Dog - Jim Kjelgaard
Dinotopia - James Gurney, Alan Dean Foster
Doglands - Tim Willocks
Dimwood Forest series - Avi
A Dog's Life: The Autobiography of a Stray - Ann M. Martin
A Dog's Porpoise Duology - M. C. Ross
Dogs of the Drowned City - Dayna Lorentz
A Dog's Purpose series - W. Bruce Cameron
Dolphin Way: Rise of the Guardians - Mark Caney
Domino - Kia Heavey
Douglas' Diary - Andrew John
DragonFire series - Lewis Jones Davies
Dragon Fires Rising - Marc Secchia
Dragon Hoard and Other Tales of Faerie - Cathleen Townsend
Dragons and Skylines series - Rowan Silver
Dragon Prayers - M.J. McPike
Dragons of Mother Stone series - Melissa McShane
Dragon Girls Series - Maddy Mara
The Deptford Mice series - Robin Jarvis
The Dogs of the Spires series - Ethan Summers
The Dragons of Solunas series - H. Leighton Dickson
The Duncton Chronicles - William Horwood
The Destiny of Dragons - J.F.R. Coates
The Diary Of A House Cat - Ileana Dorobantu
Dogtown - Katherine Applegate & Gennifer Choldenko
Die schwarze Tigerin - Peer Martin [DE]
Die weiße Wölfin - Vanessa Walder [DE]
Die Wilden Hunde Von Pompeii - Helmut Krausser [DE]
Das wilde Mäh - Vanessa Walder [DE]
E
The Eyes and the Impossible - Dave Eggers
Eclosión - Arturo Balseiro [ES]
Ein Seehund findet nach Hause - Antonia Michaelis [DE]
F
Fantastic Mr. Fox - Roald Dahl
Faithful Ruslan - Georgi Vladimov
Feather and Bone: The Crow Chronicles - Clem Martini
Feathers & Flames series - John Bailey
Felidae series (1) - Akif Pirinçci
Fifteen Rabbits - Felix Salten
Fire, Bed & Bone - Henrietta Branford
Fire of the Phoenix - Azariah Jade
Fluke - James Herbert
Firefall series - Peter Watts
Firebringer - David Clement-Davies
Flush: A Biography Book - Virginia Woolf
Fox - Glyn Frewer
Foxcraft series - Inbali Iserles
Frightful’s Mountain - Jeanie Craighead George
Frost dancers: A story of hares - Garry Kilworth
The Familiars series - Adam Jay Epstein
The Fifth - Saylor Ferguson
The Firebringer series - Meredith Ann Pierce
The Fox and The Hound - Daniel P. Mannix
The Forges of Dawn - E. Kinsey
Freundschaft im Regenwald - Peer Martin [DE]
(1) Felidae's Author - Akif Pirinçci - is known to be a Xenophobic, Anti-muslim, Anti-Lgbt and Extreme Right-Wing guy (A N4zi by his on words). Won't be going onto details just know he has a non-fiction work called "Germany Gone Mad: The Crazy Cult around Women, Homosexuals and Immigrants." His works has been out of print ever since.
G
Guardian Cats and the lost books of Alexandria - Rahma Krambo
Guardians of Ga'Hoole series - Kathryn Lasky
Good Omens - Neil Gaiman & Terry Pratchett
Griffin Quest - Sophie Torro
Gryphon Insurrection series - K. Vale Nagle
The Ghost and It's Shadow - Shaun Hick
The Golden Eagle - Robert Murphy
The Golem and the Jinni - Helene Wecker
The Good Dog - Newbery Medalist
The Guardian Herd series - Jennifer Lynn Alvarez
The Goodbye Cat - Hiro Arikawa
The Great Timbers - James A. Kane
H
Haunt Fox - Jim Kjelgaard
Haven: A Small Cat's Big Adventure - Megan Wagner Lloyd
Heavenly Horse series - Mary Stanton
Hive - Ischade Bradean
Horses of Dawn series - Kathryn Lasky
House of Tribes - Garry Kilworth
Hunter's Moon/Foxes of First dark - Garry Kilworth
Hunters Universe series - Abigail Hilton
A Hare at Dark Hollow - Joyce Stranger
The Hundred and One Dalmatians & The Starlight Barking - Dodie Smith
The Hunt for Elsewhere - Beatrice Vine
Hollow Kingdom Duology - Kira Jane Buxton
I
I am a Cat - Natsume Sōseki
I, Scheherezade: Memoirs of a Siamese Cat - Douglass Parhirst
In the Long Dark - Brian Carter
The Incredible Journey - Sheila Burnford
Im Reich der Geparde - Kira Gembri [DE]
J
Joe Grey series - Shirley Rousseau Murphy
Jonathan Livingston Seagull - Richard Bach & Russell Munson
Julie of the Wolves - Jeanie Craighead George
The Jungle Book - Rudyard Kipling
Journey to the West - Wu Cheng'en
K
Kävik the Wolf Dog - Walt Morey
Kazan duology - James Curwood
Kine Saga - Alan Lloyd
Kona's Song - Louise Searl
The Killers - Daniel P. Mannix
Kindred of the Wild - Charles G.D Roberts
König der Bären - Vanessa Walder [DE]
L
Lassie Come-Home - Eric Knight
Last of the Curlews - Fred Bodsworth
Lazy Scales - D.M. Gilmore
Legends of Blood series - Ethan Summers
A Legend of Wolf Song - George Stone
Luna the Lone Wolf - Forest Wells
Lupus Rex - John Carter Cash
Lutapolii: White Dragon of the South - Deryn Pittar
The Last Unicorn - Peter S. Beagle
The Labrador Pact & The Last Family in England - Matt Haig
The Last Dogs - Christopher Holt
The Last Eagle - Daniel P. Mannix
The Last Great Auk - Allan Eckert
The Last Monster on Earth - L.J. Davies
The Life Story of a Fox - J. C. Tregarthen
The Lost Rainforest series - Eliot Schrefer & Emilia Dziubak
The Lost Domain - Martin Hocke
The Last Whales: A Novel - Lloyd Abbey
M
Mammoth Trilogy - Stephen Baxter
Manxmouse: The Mouse Who Knew No Fear - Paul Gallico
Marney the Fox - Scott Goodall & John Stokes
Mattie: The story of a hedgehog - Norman Adams, & G.D. Griffiths
Matriarch: Elephant vs. T-Rex - Roz Gibson
Midnight's Sun - Garry Kilworth
Migon - P.C. Keeler
Minado The Devil - Dog - Erle Wilson
Monkey Wars - Richard Kurti
Mouseheart Series - Lisa Fiedler
The Mistmantle chronicles - M.I. McAllister
The Mountain Lion - Robert Murphy
The Mouse Butcher - Dick King-Smith
The Mouse Protectors Series - Olly Barrett
Maru - Die Reise der Elefanten - Kira Gembri [DE]
N
New Springtime series - Robert Silverberg
Nightshade Chronicles - Hilary Wagner
Nugly - M. C. Ross
Nuru und Lela - Das Wunder der Wildnis - Kira Gembri [DE]
O
Old One-Toe - Michel-Aimé Baudouy
Of Birds and Branches - Frances Pauli
Outlaw Red - Jim Kjelgaard
The Old Stag - Henry Williamson
The One and Only Ivan - Katherine Applegate
P
Painted Flowers - Caitlin Grizzle
Pax & Pax: Journey Home - Sara Pennypacker
Petrichor - C.E. Wright
The Plague Dogs - Richard Adams
The Pit - Elaine Ramsay
Pride Wars Series - Matt Laney
A Pup Called Trouble - Bobbie Pyron
The Peregryne Falcon - Robert Murphy
Pork and Others - Cris Freddi
Q
Queen in the Mud - Maari
Quill and Claw series - Kathryn Brown
R
Rak: The story of an Urban Fox - Jonathon Guy
Ramblefoot by Ken Kaufman
Rats of Nimh series - Robert C. O'Brien
Raven Quest - Sharon Stewart
Ravenspell Series - David Farland
Raptor Red - Robert T. Bakker
Red Fox - Charles G. D. Roberts
Redwall series - Brian Jacques
Rose in a Storm - Jon Katz
Rufus - Rutherford Montgomery
Run With the Wind series - Tom McCaughren
Runt - Marion Dane Baeur
Rustle in the Grass - Robin Hawdon
Rusty - Joyce Stranger
The Remembered War series - Robert Vane
The Rescuers series - Margery Sharp
The Red Stranger - David Stephen
The River Singers & The Rising - Tom Moorhouse
The Road Not Taken - Harry Turtledove,
The Running Foxes - Joyce Stranger
Revier der Raben - Vanessa Walder [DE]
S
Salar the Salmon - Henry Williamson
Scary Stories for Young Foxes Duology - Christian McKay Heidicker
Scaleshifter series - Shelby Hailstone Law
Shadow Walkers - Russ Chenoweth
Scream of the White Bears - David Clement-Davies
Seekers saga - Erin Hunter
Serpentia Series - Frances Pauli
Shadows in the Sky - Pete Cross
Shark Wars Series - EJ Altbacker
Silverwing series - Kenneth Oppel
Silver Brumby series - Elyne Mitchell
Sirius - Olaf Stapledon
SkyTalons Series - Sophie Torro
Solo's Journey - Joy Aiken Smith
Sky Hawk - Gill Lewis
Snow Dog - Jim Kjelgaard
Song of the River - Soinbhe Lally
Spirit of the West series - Kathleen Duey
Survivors series - Erin Hunter
Stray - A.N Wilson
String Lug the Fox - David Stephen
Swashbuckling Cats: Nine Lives on the Seven Seas - Rhonda Parrish & Co.
Swordbird series - Nancy Yi Fan
The Sheep-Pig - Dick King-Smith
The Sight & Fell - David Clement-Davies
The Silent Sky - Allan Eckert
The Silver Claw - Garry Kilworth
The Stoner Eagles - William Horwood
The Stink Files - Jennifer L. Holm & Jonathan Hamel
The Snowcat Prince - Dina Norlund
The Story Of A Seagull And The Cat Who Taught Her To Fly - Luis Sepúlveda
The Story of a Snail Who Discovered the Importance of Being Slow - Luis Sepúlveda
The Story of a dog called Leal - Luis Sepúlveda
The Story of a Red Deer - John Fortescue
The Summer King Chronicles - Jess E. Owen
Schogul, Rächer der Tiere - Birgit Laqua [DE]
Stadt der Füchse - Vanessa Walder [DE]
T
Tailchaser's Song - Tad Williams
Tarka the Otter - Henry Williamson
Three Bags Full - Leonnie Swann
Thy Servant a Dog - Rudyard Kipling
Tomorrow's Sphinx - Clare Bell
Torn Ear - Geoffrey Malone
Thor - Wayne Smith
Trickster -  Tom Moorhouse
Two Dogs and a Horse - Jim Kjelgaard
The Tale of Despereaux - Kate DiCamillo
The Travelling Cat Chronicles - Hiro Arikawa
The Trilogy of the Ants - Bernard Werber
The Trumpet of the Swan - E. B. White
The Tusk That Did the Damage - Tania James
The Tygrine cat - Inbali Iserles
U
Ultimate Dragon Saga - Graham Edwards
Under the Skin - Michel Faber
V
Varjak Paw duology - S.F Said
Vainqueur the Dragon series - Maxime J. Durand
W
War Bunny series - Christopher St. Jhon
War Horse - Michael Morpurgo
War Queen - Illthylian
Warrior Cats series - Erin Hunter
Watership Down/Tales of Watership Down - Richard Adams
Ways of Wood Folk - William J. Long
Welkin Weasels series - Garry Kilworth
West of Eden - Harry Harrison
Whalesong Trilogy - Robert Siegel
Whale - Jeremy Lucas
Whispers in the Forest - Barbara Coultry
White Wolf - Henrietta Branford
White Fang - Jack London
White Fox Series - Jiatong Chen
Wings trilogy - Don Conroy
Wild Lone - Denys Watkins-Pitchford
Wild Animals I Have Known - Ernest Thompson Seton
Willow Tree Wood Series - J. S. Betts
Wings of Fire series - Tui T. Sutherland
Winterset Hollow - Jonathan Edward Durham
Wolf: The Journey Home | Hungry for Home: A Wolf Odyssey - Asta Bowen
Wolf Brother series - Michelle Paver
Wolf Chronicles - Dorothy Hearst
Wolves of the Beyond Series - Kathryn Lasky
Woodstock Saga - Michael Tod
A Whale of the Wild - Rosanne Parry
A Wolf Called Wander - Rosanne Parry
The Waters of Nyra - Kelly Michelle Baker
The Wolves of Elementa series - Sophie Torro
The Wolves of Time - William Horwood
The Wolf Chronicles Series - Teng Rong
The Way of Kings - Louise Searl
The White Bone - Barbara Gowdy
The White Fox/Singing Tree - Brian Parvin
The White Puma - Ronald Lawrence
The Wild Road & The Golden Cat - Gabriel King
The Wildings & The Thousand names of darkness - Nilanjana Roy
The Wind in the Willows - Kenneth Grahame
The Wind Protect You - Pat Murphy
The Wolves of Paris - Daniel P. Mannix
Y
Yellow eyes - Rutherford Montgomery
The Year Of The Dinosaur - Edwin H. Colbert
Z
Zones of Thought series - Vernor Vinge
Z-Verse series by R.H
Comic Books/Graphic Novels
Animosity - Marguerite Bennett
Age of Reptiles - Ricardo Delgado
Legend - Samuel Sattin Koehler
Mouse Guard - David Petersen
Pride of Baghdad - Brian K. Vaughan & Niko Henrichon
Rover Red Charlie - Garth Ennis & Michael Dipascale
Stray Dogs - Tony Fleecs & Trish Forstner
We3 - Grant Morrison & Frank Quitely
Beasts of Burden - Evan Dorkin & Jill Thompson
LOBO: Canine Crusader of the Metal Wasteland - Macs-World-Ent
The Sandman: Dream of a Thousand Cats - Neil Gaiman
Animal Castle - Xavier Dorison & Felix Delep
Blacksad Series - Juan Díaz Canales & Juanjo Guarnido
Scurry - Mac Smith
The Snowcat Prince - Dina Norlund
Rankless - Maggie Lightheart
Animal Pound - Tom King & Peter Gross
Animal Castle - Xavier Dorison & Felix Delep
BlackSad - Juan Díaz Canales & Juanjo Guarnido
Picture Books
Steve the Dung Beetle: On a Roll - Susan R. Stoltz & Melissa Bailey
Hot Dog - Doug Salati
The Rock from the Sky - Jon Klassen
Whoever Heard of a Flying Bird? - David Cunliffe & Ivan Barrera
A Cat Named Whiskers - Shana Gorian
Ocean Tales Children's Books Series - Sarah Cullen & Zuzana Sbodová
Jake the Growling Dog - Samantha Shannon
Indie Written Works
Fins Above Series - MIROYMON
Journey of Atlas - Journey of Atlas
Webcomics
A
Africa - Arven92
After Honour - genstaelens
Awka - Nothofagus-obliqua
Arax - Azany
Amarith - Eredhys
The Apple's Echo - Helianthanas
Alone - Magpeyes
B
The Blackblood Alliance - KayFedewa
The Betrothed - Kibisca
Black Tyrant - Zapp-BEAST
Blue - HunterBeingHunted
Beast Tags - TheRoomPet
Spy - Utahraptor93
Be Reflected in my Eyes - Aquene-lupetta
C
Carry your voice - TacoBella
Caelum Sky - ALRadeck
Crescent Wing - Mikaley
Crescent Moonlight - AnimalCrispy
City of Trees - SanjanaIndica
Corpse - doeprince/ratt
D
Darbi - Sherard Jackson
The Devils Demons - Therbis
Doe of Deadwood - Songdogx
Dyten - Therbis
Desperation - PracticelImagination
E
Equus Siderae - Dalgeor
Empyrean - Leonine-Skies
Enchantment - FeralWolf1234
F
Fox Fires - Pipilia
Forget me Not - Nitteh
Fjeld - Dachiia
Felinia - Rainy-bleu
G
Golden Shrike - doeprince/ratt
Ghost of the Gulag - David Derrick Jr.
H
Horse Age - BUGHS-22
Hiraeth - AFlameThatNeverDies
Half-Blood - majkaria
Horns of Light - ThatMoonySky
I
I Hope So - Detective Calico
The Ivory Walk - TacoBella
I'm not Ready - Wolfkingdom372
J
Jet and Harley - doeprince
K
Kestrel Island - Silverphoenix
Kin - Fienduredraws
KuroMonody - IrisBdz
Krystal - Nitteh
The King of Eyes - CloverTailedFox09
L
Legend of Murk - Azany
LouptaOmbra - Loupta Ombra (OngakuK, MlleNugget & joeypony)
Leopards bring rain - Kyriuar
M
Mazes of Filth - petitecanine
Minimal All You Are - mike-princeofstars
N
Nine Riders - SpiriMuse
No Man's Land - TacoBella
Never seen the Day - R3dk3y
Norra - shadowmirku
O
Obsidian Fire - SolinaBright
Oren's Forge - teagangavet
Off-White - Akreon
Out Of Time - IndiWolf
R
Rabbit on the Moon - Songdogx & Nitteh
The Rabbit Hole - Detrah
RunningWolf Mirari - Mirella Menciassi
Raptor - ElenPanter
Redriver - FireTheWolf777
Repeat - Songdogx
The Rabbit's Foot - riri_arts
S
Scurry - Mac Smith
Simbol - Zoba22
Spirit Lock - Animal Crispy
The Sylcoe - Denece-the-sylcoe
Sunder - Aurosoul
T
Tainted Hearts - Therbis
Taxicat - owlburrow
That's Freedom Guyra - Nothofagus-obliqua
Three Corners: A Kitten's Story - Lara Frizzell
Tofauti Sawa - TheCynicalHound
Two of a Kind - ProjectNao
To Catch a Star - SleepySundae
U
Under the Ash Tree - ChevreLune
Uninvited - Nothofagus-obliqua
W
Water Wolves - LuckyStarhun
What Lurks Beneath - ArualMeow
Water Wolves - LuckyStarhun
Wild Wolves - Lombarsi
White Tail - SleepySundae
What's your damage? - FrostedCanid
The Wolves of Chena - Yamis-Art
Waves Always Crash - Hellhunde
The Whale's Heart - Possumteeeth [Warriors Fancomic]
Manga
A Centaur's Life - Murayama Kei
Beastars - Paru Itagaki
Chi's Sweet Home - Kanata Konami
Ginga Series [Silverfang] - Yoshihiro Takahashi
Gon - Masashi Tanaka
Houseki no Kuni | Land of the Lustrous - Haruko Ichikawa
Inugami-Kai - Masaya Hokazono
The Jungle Emperor - Osamu Tezuka
My roommate is a cat - Minatsuki & Asu Futatsuya
Crimsons – The Scarlet Navigators of the Ocean - Kanno Takanori
Rooster Fighter - Shū Sakuratani
Simoun - Shō Aikawa
The Fox & Little Tanuki - Mi Tagawa
Yuria 100 Shiki - Nobuto Hagio
Massugu ni Ikou - Kira
Cat Soup
The Amazing 3
Cat + Gamer - Wataru Nadatani
Animated Series
#
101 Dalmatians: The series & 101 Dalmatian Street
A
A Polar Bear in Love
B
Baja no Studio
Bagi: Monster of Mighty Nature
Bannertail: The Story of Gray Squirrel
Bluey
C
Centaurworld (2021)
Chirin's Bell
Chironup no Kitsune
D
Dokkun Dokkun
E
F
G
Gamba no Bouken
H
Hazbin Hotel
I
Invader ZIM
Inu to Neko Docchi mo Katteru to Mainichi Tanoshii
J
K
King Fang
Koisuru Shirokuma
Kemushi no Boro
Kewang Lantian
Konglong Baobei: Shiluo De Wenming
L
Little Polar Bear
M
Manxmouse's Great Activity
Mitsubachi Maya no Bouken
Mikan Enikki
Massugu ni Ikou -
My Life as a Teenage Robot
Mikan Enikki
N
O
Ore, Tsushima
Okashi na Sabaku no Suna to Manu
P
Primal
Polar Bear Cafe
Q
R
Robotboy (2005)
S
Seton Doubutsuki: Risu no Banner
Simoun
T
The Amazing 3
Tottoko Hamtarou
The Adventure of Qiqi and Keke
Tama & Friends: Third Street Story
U
V
W
Watership Down (2018) & Watership Down (1999)
What's Michael?
Wolf's Rain
Wonder Pets
X
Y
Live-Action/Hybrid show
Fantasy High
A Crown of Candy 
Burrow's End
Good Omens
Webseries
Dinosauria - Dead Sound
My Pride - tribbleofdoom
Whitefall - Chylk
The Stolen Hope - Galemtido
Dragon's Blood - FluffyGinger
Helluva Boss -
Murder Drones -
Short Films
A
Alone a wolf's winter
B
Baja's Studio
Beautiful Name
Burrow
C
Cat Piano
Cat Soup
Chicken Little
D
E
F
Far From the Tree
Ferdinand the Bull
Frypan Jiisan
G
Genji Fantasy: The Cat Fell in Love With Hikaru Genji
Gaitou to Neko
H
Hao Mao Mimi
Houzi Dian Bianpao
I
J
Je T'aime
K
Kitbull
L
Lava
Lambert the sheepish lion
Laoshu Jia Nu
M
Mahoutsukai no Melody
Monmon the Water Spider
Mushroom - Nakagawa Sawako
N
O
Of Mice and Clockworks
Osaru no Tairyou
P
Piper
Q
R
Robin Robin
Rusuban
S
Sauria - Dead Sound
Smash and Grab
Street of Crocodiles
She and Her Cat
Space Neko Theater
Shiroi Zou | White Elephant
Shi | Food
Sugar, With a Story
Straw-saurus NEO
T
The Chair
The Blue Umbrella
The Shell Shocked Egg
The Dog Door
The Dog In The Alley
That's Why They Were Made
U
Ushigaeru
V
W
With a Dog AND a Cat, Every Day is Fun
X
Y
Z
Zhui Shu
Animated Films
#
101 Dalmatians duology
A
A Monkey's Tale (1999)
All Dogs go to Heaven
The Adventures of Lolo the Penguin
Alpha and Omega saga
An American Tail
The Aristocats
Antz
Animals United
Annabelle's Wish (1997)
Alakazam the great (1960)
B
Back Outback
Balto
Bambi / Bambi II
Bolt
Brother Bear / Brother Bear II
A Bug's Life
The Big Bad Fox and Other Tales
Bee Movie
The Brave Little Toaster
Birds of a Feather
Back to the Forest
C
Cars
Chance
Chicken Run
D
Dinosaur
Speckles: The Tarbosaurus || Dino King: Journey to Fire Mountain
Dumbo
DC League of Super-Pets
E
Elemental
F
Fantastic Mr. Fox
Fantastic Planet
Felidae
The Fox and the Hound
Finding Nemo/Finding Dory
Free Birds
The Fearless Four
G
The Good Dinosaur
Ghost in the Shell
Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio
H
Happy Feet/Happy Feet Two
Help! I'm a Fish
Home on the Range
Hoero! Bun Bun Movie
Hokkyoku no Muushika Miishika
I
Ice Age Franchise
Isle of Dogs
I Am T-Rex
J
Jungledyret Hugo
K
Koati
The King of Tibetan Antelope
Kuma no Gakkou trilogy
L
Lady and the Tramp
The Land Before time Franchise
The Last Unicorn
Leafy, A Hen in the wild
Little Big Panda
The Lion King Franchise
Lucky and Zorba
Lilo & Stitch
Luca
Last Day of the Dinosaurs
M
Marcel the Shell with Shoes On
Marona's Fantastic Tale
Millionaire Dogs
My Friend Tyranno
Minuscule: Valley of the Lost Ants || Minuscule - Mandibles from Far Away
Mouse and His Child
N
Nezumi Monogatari: George to Gerald no Bouken
O
Oliver & Company
One Stormy Night
Over the Edge
P
Padak
The Plague Dogs
Pompoko
Pinocchio by Guillermo del Toro
Pipi Tobenai Hotaru
R
Raggedy Ann & Andy: A Musical Adventure
Rango
Ratatouille
Raven the Little Rascal
Reynard the Fox (1989)
Rio
Robots
Rock a Doodle
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (1998)
The Rabbi’s Cat
S
Samson and Sally
Sahara
The Secret of Nihm
The Secret Life of Pets/The Secret Life of Pets II
Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron
Sheep & Wolves
The Seventh Brother
A Stork's Journey
Stowaways on the Ark
T
A Turtle's Tale
The One and Only Ivan
Toy Story
Twilight of the Cockroaches (1987)
The Trumpet of the Swan
The Enchanted Journey
U
Unico
Underdog
V
Vuk the Little Fox
W
WALL·E
Watership Down (1978)
White Fang
Wizards
The Wild
Wolf Children
Wolfwalkers
X
Y
You Are Umasou
Z
Zootopia
Live Action/CGI Assisted Movies
Au Hasard Balthazar
Beverly Hills Chihuahua franchise
Cats & Dogs franchise
Charlotte's Web
EO
Fluke (1995) - Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Homeward Bound duology (1963 & 1996) - Disney
The Legend of Lobo (1962) - Disney
Strays (2023) - Universal Pictures
Pride (2024) - BBC
101 Dalmatians duology (1996 & 2000)
Documentary
March of the Penguins
Meerkat Manor
Lemur Street
Gangs of Lemur Island
Orangutan Island
Prairie Dog Dynasty
Chimp Empire
Monkey Thieves
Monkey Kingdom
Theather
Cats
Videogames
Animalia Survival - High Brazil Studio
Cattails - Falcon Development
Endling: Extinction is Forever
Gibbon: Beyond the trees - Broken Rules
The Lonesome Fog - Might and Delight
Meadow - Might and Delight
Niche - Stray Fawn Studio
Shelter / Shelter 2/ Shelter 3 - Might and Delight
Paws - Might and Delight
Stray - BlueTwelve Studio
The WILDS - Gluten Free Games
Wolf Quest - eduweb
Golden Treasure: The Great Green - Dreaming Door Studios
Spirit of the North - Infuse Studio
Ōkami - Clover Studio
Rain World - Videocult
Feather - Samurai Punk
Eagle Flight - Ubisoft Montreal Studio
Copoka - Inaccurate Interactive
Untitled Goose Game - House House
PaRappa - NanaOn-Sha
Night in the Woods - Infinite Fall & Secret Lab
Monster Prom - Beautiful Glitch
Them's Fightin' Herds - Mane6
Toontown
E.V.O.: Search for Eden - Givro Corporation
(Pretty much most of Might and Delight games)
Online Browser Games
Lioden
Wolvden
Flight Rising
Lorwolf
Table Top Games
Bunnies & Burrows
Chronicles of Darkness
Wanderhome
Mage: The Awakening
Werewolf: The Apocalypse
Pugmire
Three Raccoons in a Trench Coat
World Tree (RPG)
Pawpocalypse
Heckin' Good Doggos
Humblewood
Dungeons & Dragons (Depends on the GM)
Music
In My Eyes You're a Giant - Sonata Arctica
It Won't Fade - Unia
The Cage - Winterheart's Guild
Other Online Projects
Youtubers
Cardinal West
Xenofiction Reviews
Gen. Videos
Trope Talk: Small Mammal on a Big Adventure by Overly Sarcastic Productions
youtube
Worlds
Mirolapye - Varverine
Franchises
Sonic the Hedgehog
My little pony
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Hamtaro
Pokemon
Digimon
Kirby
Monter High
Tom & Jerry
Baldur’s Gate
Maya the Bee
The Little Polar Bear
140 notes · View notes
mightywellfan · 7 months
Text
Fyvie Castle
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The earliest parts of Fyvie Castle date from the 13th century – some sources claim it was built in 1211 by William the Lion. Fyvie was the site of an open-air court held by Robert the Bruce, and Charles I lived there as a child. Following the Battle of Otterburn in 1390, it ceased to be a royal stronghold. Instead, it fell into the possession of five successive families – Preston, Meldrum, Seton, Gordon and Leith – each of whom added a new tower to the castle. The oldest of these, the Preston Tower (located on the far right as one faces the main facade of Fyvie), dates to between 1390 and 1433. The impressive Seton tower forms the entrance, and was erected in 1599 by Alexander Seton. He commissioned the great processional staircase several years later. The Gordon Tower followed in 1778 , and the Leith in 1890.
13 notes · View notes
scotianostra · 7 months
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On December 5th 1560 King Francis II of France, the husband of Mary Queen of Scots, died.
Although not crowned it has to be remembered that Francis was also King consort of Scotland.
Francis was born on 19 January 1544, the eldest son of Henry II of France and Catherine de Medici, he was named for his grandfather, King Francis I.
When Francis was four years old, the Scots and French signed the Treaty of Haddington in July 1548 arranging the betrothal of Mary Queen of Scots and the dauphin Francis in return for French aid to expel the invading English. Mary Queen of Scots sailed from Dumbarton for France in the August of 1548 when she was but five years old. The young Queen was accompanied by her four Marys, the daughters of Scottish noble families, Mary Beaton, Mary Seton, Mary Fleming and Mary Livingston.
Mary spent the rest of her childhood at the court of her father-in-law, Henri II Her father-in-law, Henry II of France wrote 'from the very first day they met, my son and she got on as well together as if they had known each other for a long time'. Mary was a pretty child and brought up in the same nursery as her future husband and his siblings, became very attached to him. She corresponded regularly Mary of Guise , who remained in Scotland to rule as regent for her daughter. Much of her early life was spent at Château de Chambord. She was educated at the French court learning French, Latin, Greek, Spanish and Italian and enjoyed falconry, needlework, poetry, prose, horse riding and playing musical instruments.
Mary was the cosseted darling of the French court, the doting Henri II wrote 'The little Queen of Scots is the most perfect child I have ever seen.' He corresponded frequently with Mary of Guise, expressing his delight in his young daughter-in-law. Mary's maternal grandmother, Antoinette of Guise, in a letter to her daughter in Scotland, stated that she found Mary ' very pretty, graceful and self assured.'
Francis and Mary were married with spectacular pageantry and magnificence in the cathedral of Notre Dame, Paris, by the Cardinal Archbishop of Rouen, in the presence of Henry II, Queen Catherine de' Medici and a glittering throng of cardinals and nobles. The French courtier Pierre de Brantôme described Mary as ‘a hundred times more beautiful than a goddess of heaven … her person alone was worth a kingdom.’
Among the wedding guests was one, James Hepburn Earl of Bothwell. Francis was fourteen and Mary fifteen at the time, Francis then held the title King consort of Scotland until his death.
When Henri II was killed during a jousting contest, incidentally by Gabriel de Lorges, Comte de Montgomery, Captain of The Scots Guard, and a descendant of Alexander Montgomerie of Auchterhouse, Mary's young husband Francois ascended the throne. Francis was reported to have found the crown of France so heavy that the nobles were obliged to hold it in place for him.
The young Francis became a tool of Mary's maternal relations, the ambitious Guise family, who seized the chance for power and hoped to crush the Huguenots in France. The Huguenot leader, Louis de Bourbon, prince de Condé plotted the conspiracy of Amboise in March 1560, an abortive coup d'etat in which Huguenots surrounded the Château of Amboise and attempted to seize the King. The conspiracy was savagely put down, and its failure led to increase the power of the Guises. This alarmed the king 's mother, Catherine de Medici, who reacted by attempting to secure the appointment of the moderate Michel de L'Hospital as chancellor.
During the autumn of 1560 François became increasingly ill, and died from the complications of an ear condition, in Orléans, Loiret. Since the marriage had borne no children, the French throne passed to his 10-year-old brother, Charles IX. Mary was said to be grief-stricken Multiple diseases have been suggested as the cause of Francis' death, such as mastoiditis, meningitis, or otitis exacerbated into an abscess. Francis was buried in the Basilica of St Denis.
There was no place for the seventeen year old Mary, Queen of Scots in France, she prepared to return to her native Scotland with an uncertain future that would hold.
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Current Submissions
Submissions remain open until ~10pm pst tomorrow (March 3rd); submit through this form or the ask box
Those who have secured spots on the bracket (3 or more submissions);
Elizabeth Bennett & Fitzwilliam Darcy from Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Enjolras & Grantaire from Le Misérables by Victor Hugo
Victor Frankenstein & Henry Clerval from Frankenstein by Mary Shelly
Faustus & Mephistopheles from Dr Faustus by Christopher Marlowe
Ishmael & Queequeg from Moby-Dick by Herman Melville
Mina & Johnathan Harker from Dracula by Bram Stoker
Henry Jekyll & Gabriel Utterson from The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
Other possible contenders (under read more);
Offred & Moria from The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
Celie & Shug from The Color Purple by Alice Walker
Lestat & Marius from The Vampire Chronicles by Anne Rice
Gimli & Legolas from Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien
Samwise Gamgee & Frodo Baggins from Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien
Gandalf & Hobbits from the works of Tolkien
Romeo & Juliet from Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare
Clarissa Dalloway & Sally Seton from Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
Anne Elliot & Frederick Wentworth from Persuasion by Jane Austen
Emma Woodhouse & George Knightley from Emma by Jane Austen
Maurice & Alec from Maurice by EM Forster
Margaret & Thornton from North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell
Holden Caufield & Stradletter from The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger
Charlie & Patrick from The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky
Gene Forrester & Finny from A Separate Peace by John Knowles
Tom Sawyer & Huckleberry Finn from the works of Mark Twain
John Yossarian & the Chaplain from Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
Jane Eyre & Helen Burns from Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
Lionel Verney & Adrian Windsor from The Last Man by Mary Shelly
Eugenie Danglars & Louise d'Armilly from The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas
Dante & Virgil from The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri
Hamlet & Horatio from Hamlet by William Shakespeare
Lizzie Hexam & Eugene Wrayburn from Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens
Phileas Fogg & Passepartout from Around the World in 80 Days by Jules Verne
Huckleberry Finn & Jim from the works of Mark Twain
Sherlock Holmes & John Watson from Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Lord & Lady Macbeth from Macbeth by William Shakespeare
Beatrice & Benedick from Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare
Gilgamesh & Enkidu from The Epic of Gilgamesh
Heathcliff & Catherine Earnshaw from Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
Mr. Collins & Elizabeth Bennett from Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Victor Frankenstein & Adam ('the creation') from Frankenstein by Mary Shelly
Dorian Gray & Lord Henry from The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
Rodion Raskolnikov & Mitya Razumikhin from Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Rosencrantz & Guildenstern from Hamlet by William Shakespeare
First Mate Starbuck & Captain Ahab from Moby-Dick by Herman Melville
Charles Bingley & Fitzwilliam Darcy from Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Jane Eyre & Mr. Rochester from Jane Eyre by Emily Brontë
Jean Valjean & Inspector Javert from Le Misérables by Victor Hugo
Victor Frankenstein & Robert Walton from Frankenstein by Mary Shelly
Mary Catherine Blackwood & Constance Blackwood from We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson
Benvolio & Mercutio from Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare
Achilles & Patroclus from The Illiad
Ajax & Ajax from The Illiad
Jack & Ralph from The Lord of the Flies by William Golding
Telemachus & Theoclymenus from The Odyssey
Jo & Laurie from Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
Elinor Dashwood & Edward Farrars from Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen
Charles Bingley & Jane Bennett from Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Jo, Amy, Meg, & Beth from Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
Jack Seward & Abraham van Helsing from Dracula by Bram Stoker
Henry Jekyll & Edward Hyde from The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
Ned Land & Conseil from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne
Earl of Montararat & Earl Tolloler from Iolanthe
Fogg, Passepartout, & Aouda from Around the World in Days by Jules Verne
Guy Montag & Professor Faber from Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Nick Carraway & Jay Gatsby from The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Napoleon & Squealer from Animal Farm by George Orwell
Antonio & Sebastian from Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare
Antonio & Sebastian from The Tempest by William Shakespeare
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elvisalltheway101 · 7 months
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•Buttered and Sweet Bread•
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Author’s note: So…it’s been a while. And okay, I have a good reason to it! Recently, I’ve been so busy because I’m being an unpaid babysitter to my siblings, and I’ve also picked up hella shifts because Y’know, bills don’t stop 😭. May the good lord help me. Anyways…with that being said, I’m going to kind of speed this up. It may feel a little rushed because I have a whole thing planned out with this story but unfortunately I ain’t a patient one that can write hella chapters💀.
Author won’t shut up: While also having low patience, I’m losing slight motivation and confidence into this thing but I’m certain to get this done. No matter how long it takes, because I want to do a steamy and sweet sequel 🤭. Plus, I’m trying to clear out my drafts and all because I NEED to make a lil thang that’s been on my mind for a while 🫣.
warnings: a new character!
𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹
As water trickled down her hair, she peeked and looked around the grumpy crowd across. Watching the pale and cold faces, then trailing to be met with kind green eyes. The young man who had boarded with the family of 3, smiled a warm one to her before quickly dipping back his nose into his book.
2 hours later, dressed in a fresh green silk, Kit was spreading the wet dress and woolen cloak to dry on the sun warmed planking of the deck and hen her glance was caught by the wide black hate, and she looked up to see the new passenger coming towards her.
“If you will give me leave,” he said with a stiff courtesy, removing his hat to reveal a fine forehead and his bangs brushing down, “I’d like to introduce myself. I am James Wilbury, bound for Wethersfield, which I’ve learned is your destination as well.”
Kit had not forgotten that comforting smile. “I am Francine Blair,” she answered with a new sort of confidence. “I am on the way to Wethersfield to live with my aunt, Mistress Seton.”
“Is John Seton your uncle then? His name is well known along the river.”
“Yes, but I have never seen him, nor my aunt either. I do not know very much of them just that she is my mother’s sister back in England and she is very beautiful.”
The young man looked puzzled, “I have never met your aunt,” he said politely. “I came to look for you now because I felt I should ask for your pardon for the way we all behaved toward you this morning… After all, it was only a kind thing you meant to do, to retrieve the toy back for the child.”
“‘Twas a very foolish thing, I realize now,” she admitted with a huff and pout away. “I am forever doing foolish things. Even so, I can’t understand why it should make everyone angry.”
He considered this gravely. “You took us aback, that is all. We are all sure you would drown before our eyes. It was astonishing to see you swimming.”
“But can’t you swim?”
He flushed and pursed his lips to a thin line, clearing his throat. “I cannot swim a stroke, nor could anyone on this ship, I warrant, except Elvis who was on the water. Where in England could you have learnt such?”
“Not England, I was born in Barbados.”
“Barbados!” He stared and involuntarily gasped. “The heathen island in the West Indies?”
“It’s no heathen island. Tis as civilized as England, with a famous town and fine streets and shops. My grandfather was one of the first plantation owners with a grant from the king.” Francine spoke with a proud smile and shrugged.
“Puritan? Are you?” James looked about to search into her eyes.
“Puritan? You mean a Roundhead? One of those traitors who murdered King Charles?”
A spark of protest flashed across his mild gray eyes. He started to speak but then thought better against it and asked gently, “You are going to stay here in Connecticut?”
Under his serious gaze Francine suddenly felt uneasy. But why? She couldn’t put her finger on the sudden change of atmosphere.
Is there something else among these strange people that hid behind those frowns and angered glares that she does not know of?
𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹𖦹
Author’s note: So…I decided to stop here and fully absorb a new character before moving on to a whole ‘nother thing. I hope you enjoyed though!
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Woman with Veil, Sarajevo, Yugoslavia
In 2018, Charles Seton, a photo restoration specialist and family friend, digitised and restored the photographs. Scheuer’s sons and Seton began identifying locations, reconstructing the chronology of the trip, sequencing the rolls of film, and researching other questions that these photographs pose. Here, a woman smiles back at the photographer behind her veil. She wears lipstick and carries an elegant handbag. The curators suspect that the woman is one of Scheuer’s travelling companions, who may have put on the hijab in order to enter the mosque.
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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Vince Barnett, Paul Muni, and Karen Morley in Scarface (Howard Hawks, 1932)
Cast: Paul Muni, Ann Dvorak, Karen Morley, George Raft, Vince Barnett, Osgood Perkins, Boris Karloff, C. Henry Gordon, Inez Palange. Screenplay: Ben Hecht, Seton I. Miller, John Lee Mahin, W.R. Burnett, based on a novel by Armitage Trail. Cinematography: Lee Garmes, L. William O'Connell. Set designer: Harry Oliver. Film editing: Edward Curtiss
Like so many early talkies, Scarface feels a little off in its pacing at times, especially in scenes with dialogue, as if the director was uncertain how much of the exposition was getting across to the audience. Which is surprising, considering the director is Howard Hawks, the master of fast-paced repartee. But the real Hawks shows up eventually, especially in the action scenes, and in some brilliant bits, such as the murder of Boris Karloff's Tom Gaffney in the bowling alley. We see Gaffney start to fall after the shot, but the camera follows the track of the ball he has just bowled: It's a strike, but one pin wobbles uncertainly for a second before toppling. François Truffaut commented on the scene, "This isn't literature. It may be dance or poetry. It is certainly cinema." For many, Hawks's Scarface has been overshadowed by Brian De Palma's 1983 version, and its rough contemporaries Little Caesar (Mervyn LeRoy, 1931) and The Public Enemy (William A. Wellman, 1931), the gangster films that set Edward G. Robinson and James Cagney on their road to fame, shadowed the Hawks film at the time, delaying its release as Hawks and producer Howard Hughes wrangled with the Hays Office censors, who were edgy about the plethora of gangster films. In response to their objections, the film has no fewer than three screens full of text before the movie actually starts, proclaiming that it's "an indictment of gang rule in America and the callous indifference of the government to this constantly increasing menace," and exhorting the audience to demand that the government do something about it. Later there are clearly interpolated scenes that suggest some of the things the government can do include gun control and immigration reform or even the imposition of martial law. The film was even released with a subtitle, Scarface: The Shame of a Nation. This heavy-handedness suggests that Hughes had less clout with the Hays Office than did Warner Bros., which didn't jump through quite so many hoops in releasing Little Caesar and The Public Enemy. Nevertheless, Scarface was a box office success, largely because it's a hugely entertaining film, showcasing what may be Paul Muni's best screen performance -- the only other contender would be I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang (Mervyn LeRoy, 1932). Muni has a leering, gleeful quality as Tony Camonte; he's almost sexy, which is something that would never be said of the actor after he began to take himself seriously in William Dieterle's stodgy biopic celebrations of Great Men like The Story of Louis Pasteur (1936) and The Life of Emile Zola (1937). Because Scarface was made before the Production Code clampdown on sex, it's pretty clear what's going on between Tony and Karen Morley's Poppy, but also that Tony's relationship with his sister, Cesca (Ann Dvorak), has a touch of the perverse about it. The film is full of delicious asides, too, like a minor character, a reporter known as "MacArthur from the Journal," a tip of the hat to screenwriter Ben Hecht's former colleague in Chicago journalism, Charles MacArthur, who was also his co-writer on the play The Front Page. The character is played by Hecht and MacArthur's friend John Lee Mahin, one of the screenwriters on Scarface. 
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hbhughes · 3 months
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Catherine "Kay" L. Smith
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Catherine”Kay” L. Smith, 92, of Swoyersville passed away peacefully on March 27, 2024. Born in Kingston, she was the daughter of the late James and Elizabeth (Perugino) Umbra. Kay and her loving husband of late, Charley, enjoyed 67 years of marriage.
Following her graduation from Edwardsville High school, she declined several opportunities to extend her education and accompanied her older sisters in accepting a position within the local garment industry. Throughout 45 years of employment, she served in numerous supervisory and leadership positions. In addition, Kay maintained a successful monogramming business. An accomplished seamstress, she enjoyed monitoring current fashions and designing clothing for her three daughters, specializing in dresses and formal gowns and attire. Upon her retirement, Kay became a co-founder with her husband of Kay’s T-tags, a state-certified agency for notary work and title transfers. A woman of many interests and talents, Kay also enjoyed baking an assortment of delicious cookies, cakes and pastries, often preparing decorative presentations as gifts to family and friends. Along with her husband Charley, she volunteered and entertained at various local nursing homes and served as a volunteer usher at the F. M. Kirby Center. A devout Catholic, Kay nurtured her family in the traditions of our faith. She was an active member of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton (Holy Trinity) parish, the Christian Mothers and volunteered on various parish committees, dedicating numerous hours of service to her parish. Kay’s love of family was unconditional and passionate. She cherished spending time at family gatherings, and especially enjoyed visits from her grandchildren and great grandchildren.
Kay would never miss the chance to dance with her favorite partner and loving husband of 67 years, Charley. Kay was preceded in death by her parents, husband, Charley, four brothers, Joseph, Patrick, WIlliam, and James Umbra and her sisters, Isabelle Spisak, Mary Schwartz, and Rose (Coury) Bellas. She is survived by her three children, Dr. Deborah Smith Mileski and husband, James of Hanover Township and Naples, FL, Dr. Sharon Smith Hudacek and husband Stephen, Harveys Lake and Naples, FL, and Kim Smith Proctor and husband, Mark of Ponte Vedra Beach, FL and Harvey’s Lake; grandchildren Brynn and husband Brian Lewis of Arlington, VA., Matthew and wife Dr. Kelsey Mileski of Ponte Vedra Beach, FL, Stephen Hudacek and wife Maria of Philadelphia and Harveys Lake, Charles and wife Dr. Jaclyn Hudacek of Dallas, PA, Joshua Pucha and fiancee Stacey of Jacksonville, FL, Paige and Tate Prucha of Ponte Vedra Beach, FL.; and great grandchildren, Miles, Charley Grace, Reese, Madelyn, Henry, Drew, and Annie.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, April 6, 2024 in St. Elizabeth Seton Church, 116 Hughes St. Swoyersville. Family and friends may visit from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m. prior to the Mass. Interment will be at Holy Trinity Cemetery, Swoyersville. Funeral services are entrusted to Hugh B. Hughes and Son, Inc.
Kay’s family wishes to extend sincere appreciation to her assisted living care staff at Highland Park Senior Living, in particular, Carol, Jim, Paula and Chrissy for their countless hours of comforting assistance and personal support, as well as to the staff of Erwine Home Health and Hospice, in particular, Mary, Joyce, Sue and JuJu for their ongoing compassionate care.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Catherine and Charles Smith Memorial Scholarship fund for nursing students in need via Misericordia University, 301 Lake Street, Dallas, PA 18612.
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brookston · 6 months
Text
Holidays 1.4
Holidays
Amnesty For Polygamists Day
Appendectomy Day
Carnaval Blancos Negros begins (Colombia) [Ends 1.6]
Chona-Hajimeshiki (Kamakura, Japan)
Colonial Martyrs Repression Day (Angola)
Crucian Christmas Festival (US Virgin Islands)
Day of King Amador (São Tomé and Principe)
Day of the Martyrs (Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Day to Mourn Racism
Dia del Periodista (National Journalist Day; Mexico)
Dimpled Chad Day (a.k.a. Hanging Chad Day)
Extra Humiliation Day
Flower Basket Day
Get Out Your Boxer Shorts Day
Hit Parade Day
Hwinukan Mukee (Ryukyuan; Okinawa, Japan)
International Jewish Book Day
International Unsolicited Duck Pic Day
Martyr’s Day (Dem. Republic of Congo)
National Clara Day
National Emotional Eating Awareness Day
National Missouri Day
National Rachel Day
National Ribbon Skirt Day (Canada)
National Trivia Day
Newtons Day
Ogoni Day
Perchtenläufe (Festival to Frighten Away Winter; Austria)
Perihelion (Earth closest to the Sun)
Pop Music Chart Day
Rabbit Day (French Republic)
Short People Day
Tom Thumb Day
World Braille Day (UN)
World Hypnotism Day
Zero Gravity Day [Hoax]
Food & Drink Celebrations
Blender Day
Eat an Oreo Cookie, Look at Your Teeth, and Remember to Floss Day
National Grape Day
National Kraft Mac & Cheese Day
National Spaghetti Carbonara Day
National Spaghetti Day
1st Thursday in January
Kid Lit Art Postcard Day [1st Thursday]
Wintersköl (Aspen, Colorado) [Begins Thursday before 2nd Sunday]
Independence & Related Days
Axonbazl (Declared; 2018) [unrecognized]
Burma (a.k.a. Myanmar; from UK, 1948)
Martyrs of Independence Day (Zaire)
Utah Statehood Day (#45; 1890)
Feast Days
Albert Camus (Existentialism)
André Masson (Artology)
Angela of Foligno (Christian; Saint)
Arthur Villeneuve (Artology)
Carmen (Muppetism)
Charles Darwin Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Day of Setting Boundaries (Pagan)
Day to Honor Freyja (Norse)
Eleventh Day of Christmas
Elizabeth Ann Seton (Christian; Saint)
Evergreen Day (Pagan)
Ferréol of Uzès (Christian; Saint)
Festival of Fufluns (Etruscan God of Wine)
Forefeast of the Theophany (Bulgaria)
Marsden Hartley (Artology)
Mavilus (Christian; Saint)
Pharaildis of Ghent (Christian; Saint)
Rigobert (Christian; Saint)
Spaghetti Day (Pastafarian)
Terminalia: Janus’s Day (Pagan)
Twelve Holy Days #10 (Capricorn, the knees; Esoteric Christianity)
Twelvetide, Day #11 (a.k.a. the Twelve Days of Christmas or Christmastide) [until 1.5]
Ulysses (Positivist; Saint)
Yoshitomo Nara (Artology)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Lucky Day (Philippines) [3 of 71]
Perilous Day (13th Century England) [3 of 32]
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Tycho Brahe Unlucky Day (Scandinavia) [3 of 37]
Unfortunate Day (Pagan) [2 of 57]
Unglückstage (Unlucky Day; Pennsylvania Dutch) [4 of 30]
Very Unlucky Day (Grafton’s Manual of 1565) [3 of 60]
Premieres
Between Two Ferns (TV Talk Show; 2008)
Billboard’s Hit Parade (Popular Song List; 1936)
Bullwinkle’s Testimonial Dinner (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S6, Ep. 333; 1965)
The Carnation Contended Hour (TV Musical Variety Show; 1932)
Cheese in the Trap (South Korean TV Series; 2016)
Derry Girls (UK TV Series; 2018)
Don’t Axe Me (WB MM Cartoon; 1958)
The Doors, by The Doors (Album; 1967)
Father’s Lion (Disney Cartoon; 1952)
Hello, Orient or That’s Some Dandy-Looking China You Have There (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S6, Ep. 334; 1965)
The Library of Babel, Jorge Luis Borges (Short Story; 1941)
A Man Lay Dead, by Ngaio Marsh (Novel; 1934) [Roderick Alleyn #1]
Mickey’s Polo Team (Disney Cartoon; 1936)
Night Court (TV Series; 1984)
Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out, recorded by Louis Jordan (Song; 1957)
Roundabout, by Yes (Song; 1972)
The Saint (Radio Series; 1945)
Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow (a.k.a. The Big Trip Up Yonder), by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. (Short Story; 1954)
Vanity Fair, by William Makepeace Thackeray (Novel; 1847)
Today’s Name Days
Angela, Marius, Rüdiger, Titus (Austria)
Tihomir (Bulgaria)
Anđela, Borislava, Emanuel (Croatia)
Diana (Czech Republic)
Metusalem (Denmark)
Ruth, Rutt (Estonia)
Ruut, Tiitus (Finland)
Odilon (France)
Angelika, Christiane (Germany)
Leóna, Titusz (Hungary)
Angela, Cristiana, Elsa, Ermete, Fausta (Italy)
Ilva, Spodra (Latvia)
Arimantas, Arimantė, Benedikta, Titas (Lithuania)
Roar, Roger (Norway)
Angelika, Aniela, Benedykta, Benita, Dobromir, Dobrymir, Eugeniusz, Grzegorz, Izabela, Leonia, Rygobert, Tytus (Poland)
Teoctist (Romania)
Anastasia (Russia)
Drahoslav (Slovakia)
Ángela, Rigoberto (Spain)
Rut (Sweden)
Conrad (Ukraine)
Angel, Angela, Angelica, Angelina, Angeline, Angelique, Angelo, Angie, Dangelo, Deangelo, Lewis, Lou, Louie, Louis, Luis (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 4 of 2024; 362 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 4 of week 1 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Beth (Birch) [Day 10 of 28]
Chinese: Month 12 (Jia-Zi), Day 23 (Ding-Mao)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 23 Teveth 5784
Islamic: 22 Jumada II 1445
J Cal: 4 White; Fourthday [4 of 30]
Julian: 22 December 2023
Moon: 44%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 4 Moses (1st Month) [Ulysses]
Runic Half Month: Eihwaz or Eoh (Yew Tree) [Day 10 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 15 of 89)
Zodiac: Capricorn (Day 14 of 31)
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brookstonalmanac · 6 months
Text
Holidays 1.4
Holidays
Amnesty For Polygamists Day
Appendectomy Day
Carnaval Blancos Negros begins (Colombia) [Ends 1.6]
Chona-Hajimeshiki (Kamakura, Japan)
Colonial Martyrs Repression Day (Angola)
Crucian Christmas Festival (US Virgin Islands)
Day of King Amador (São Tomé and Principe)
Day of the Martyrs (Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Day to Mourn Racism
Dia del Periodista (National Journalist Day; Mexico)
Dimpled Chad Day (a.k.a. Hanging Chad Day)
Extra Humiliation Day
Flower Basket Day
Get Out Your Boxer Shorts Day
Hit Parade Day
Hwinukan Mukee (Ryukyuan; Okinawa, Japan)
International Jewish Book Day
International Unsolicited Duck Pic Day
Martyr’s Day (Dem. Republic of Congo)
National Clara Day
National Emotional Eating Awareness Day
National Missouri Day
National Rachel Day
National Ribbon Skirt Day (Canada)
National Trivia Day
Newtons Day
Ogoni Day
Perchtenläufe (Festival to Frighten Away Winter; Austria)
Perihelion (Earth closest to the Sun)
Pop Music Chart Day
Rabbit Day (French Republic)
Short People Day
Tom Thumb Day
World Braille Day (UN)
World Hypnotism Day
Zero Gravity Day [Hoax]
Food & Drink Celebrations
Blender Day
Eat an Oreo Cookie, Look at Your Teeth, and Remember to Floss Day
National Grape Day
National Kraft Mac & Cheese Day
National Spaghetti Carbonara Day
National Spaghetti Day
1st Thursday in January
Kid Lit Art Postcard Day [1st Thursday]
Wintersköl (Aspen, Colorado) [Begins Thursday before 2nd Sunday]
Independence & Related Days
Axonbazl (Declared; 2018) [unrecognized]
Burma (a.k.a. Myanmar; from UK, 1948)
Martyrs of Independence Day (Zaire)
Utah Statehood Day (#45; 1890)
Feast Days
Albert Camus (Existentialism)
André Masson (Artology)
Angela of Foligno (Christian; Saint)
Arthur Villeneuve (Artology)
Carmen (Muppetism)
Charles Darwin Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Day of Setting Boundaries (Pagan)
Day to Honor Freyja (Norse)
Eleventh Day of Christmas
Elizabeth Ann Seton (Christian; Saint)
Evergreen Day (Pagan)
Ferréol of Uzès (Christian; Saint)
Festival of Fufluns (Etruscan God of Wine)
Forefeast of the Theophany (Bulgaria)
Marsden Hartley (Artology)
Mavilus (Christian; Saint)
Pharaildis of Ghent (Christian; Saint)
Rigobert (Christian; Saint)
Spaghetti Day (Pastafarian)
Terminalia: Janus’s Day (Pagan)
Twelve Holy Days #10 (Capricorn, the knees; Esoteric Christianity)
Twelvetide, Day #11 (a.k.a. the Twelve Days of Christmas or Christmastide) [until 1.5]
Ulysses (Positivist; Saint)
Yoshitomo Nara (Artology)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Lucky Day (Philippines) [3 of 71]
Perilous Day (13th Century England) [3 of 32]
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Tycho Brahe Unlucky Day (Scandinavia) [3 of 37]
Unfortunate Day (Pagan) [2 of 57]
Unglückstage (Unlucky Day; Pennsylvania Dutch) [4 of 30]
Very Unlucky Day (Grafton’s Manual of 1565) [3 of 60]
Premieres
Between Two Ferns (TV Talk Show; 2008)
Billboard’s Hit Parade (Popular Song List; 1936)
Bullwinkle’s Testimonial Dinner (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S6, Ep. 333; 1965)
The Carnation Contended Hour (TV Musical Variety Show; 1932)
Cheese in the Trap (South Korean TV Series; 2016)
Derry Girls (UK TV Series; 2018)
Don’t Axe Me (WB MM Cartoon; 1958)
The Doors, by The Doors (Album; 1967)
Father’s Lion (Disney Cartoon; 1952)
Hello, Orient or That’s Some Dandy-Looking China You Have There (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S6, Ep. 334; 1965)
The Library of Babel, Jorge Luis Borges (Short Story; 1941)
A Man Lay Dead, by Ngaio Marsh (Novel; 1934) [Roderick Alleyn #1]
Mickey’s Polo Team (Disney Cartoon; 1936)
Night Court (TV Series; 1984)
Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out, recorded by Louis Jordan (Song; 1957)
Roundabout, by Yes (Song; 1972)
The Saint (Radio Series; 1945)
Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow (a.k.a. The Big Trip Up Yonder), by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. (Short Story; 1954)
Vanity Fair, by William Makepeace Thackeray (Novel; 1847)
Today’s Name Days
Angela, Marius, Rüdiger, Titus (Austria)
Tihomir (Bulgaria)
Anđela, Borislava, Emanuel (Croatia)
Diana (Czech Republic)
Metusalem (Denmark)
Ruth, Rutt (Estonia)
Ruut, Tiitus (Finland)
Odilon (France)
Angelika, Christiane (Germany)
Leóna, Titusz (Hungary)
Angela, Cristiana, Elsa, Ermete, Fausta (Italy)
Ilva, Spodra (Latvia)
Arimantas, Arimantė, Benedikta, Titas (Lithuania)
Roar, Roger (Norway)
Angelika, Aniela, Benedykta, Benita, Dobromir, Dobrymir, Eugeniusz, Grzegorz, Izabela, Leonia, Rygobert, Tytus (Poland)
Teoctist (Romania)
Anastasia (Russia)
Drahoslav (Slovakia)
Ángela, Rigoberto (Spain)
Rut (Sweden)
Conrad (Ukraine)
Angel, Angela, Angelica, Angelina, Angeline, Angelique, Angelo, Angie, Dangelo, Deangelo, Lewis, Lou, Louie, Louis, Luis (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 4 of 2024; 362 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 4 of week 1 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Beth (Birch) [Day 10 of 28]
Chinese: Month 12 (Jia-Zi), Day 23 (Ding-Mao)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 23 Teveth 5784
Islamic: 22 Jumada II 1445
J Cal: 4 White; Fourthday [4 of 30]
Julian: 22 December 2023
Moon: 44%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 4 Moses (1st Month) [Ulysses]
Runic Half Month: Eihwaz or Eoh (Yew Tree) [Day 10 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 15 of 89)
Zodiac: Capricorn (Day 14 of 31)
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irishhills · 6 months
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your art matters
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St. Elizabeth Seton High School isn’t what one would call a big school. It’s bigger than some of the other Catholic schools around, but it’s not big enough to have more than your traditional electives (painting, drama, choir). It really doesn’t seem big enough for students to audition for the school paper’s cartoonist, but here’s Jane Egan, turning in her sketches to the yearbook committee.
Her big brother, Luke, was editor-in-chief of the yearbook last year. Since then, he’s graduated and moved on, but he warned her that the remaining committee members probably wouldn’t be too fond of her style.
“The darkest they go for is a Charles Schulz,” Luke said as he watched Jane assemble her portfolio. “You know you’re a Charles Addams.”
“So what if I am?” Jane said then. “I think my art is good.”
As she waits to hear the end-of-day announcements over the PA, Jane still thinks her art is good. She turned in some of her best work to the yearbook committee earlier this week. A snarky comic about the benefits of being the unpopular kids at the football game – getting to blend into the crowd while you eat hot dogs in the cool fall weather. A diagram of the average student’s backpack, filled with useless math problems and a sliver of things that actually matter, like literature and history. A portrait of herself, the overworked freshman. Her drawings make use of thick black ink, and her characters have big eyes like a Margaret Keane painting. But Jane knows they’re good. In junior high, she won the “Class Artist” award for a reason.
It does not hurt that her big sister, Amy, took over for Luke as editor-in-chief.
Jane tries to keep her cool as Principal Mathers reads the announcements. Something about auditions for The Crucible, something about a boys’ soccer game against St. Catherine’s later that night, something else about lunch tomorrow. And then it’s time.
“News from the yearbook committee,” Principal Mathers says, and Jane doesn’t even care that she’s standing too close to the microphone. “Your cartoonist for the 1990-1991 school year will be …”
Jane taps her pencil against her French textbook, waiting for her name to be called.
“Richard Palmer!”
The air feels strange in the room now. Jane can’t even think of who this Richard Palmer person is, but he doesn’t sound real. And of course they went with a guy. Guys are the best at everything. At least, that’s how you feel if you’re Amy Egan, who likes every boy she feasts her eyes on. Jane knows she shouldn’t think that way. It just feels different when it’s your sister, the ultimate traitor.
After Madame Rousseau has them all say the Notre Père, Jane raises her hand and asks, with all the remaining breath in her burning lungs, “Puis-je aller aux WC?”
She’s out the door before Madame Rousseau can finish saying yes.
And she’s down the hallway, crying like an idiot, making noise when she knows she should be cool, play it cool, cool it, baby, cool it.
People are noticing. There’s a moral philosophy class going on next door to French class, and Chris comes out of that room with a furrowed brow.
“Jane?” he asks. “That you?”
But Jane blows him off. She doesn’t need Chris’s jokes and reassurance right now. She probably never needs jokes and reassurance again. This is about revenge.
Somehow, she knew Amy would be in the downstairs bathroom.
She’s standing in front of the mirror, reapplying her Strawberry Vanilla lipstick. Clearly, she knew Jane would be there, too. When they lock eyes – Amy, with all the calmness in the world, and Jane, with the wettest tears she’s ever cried – it’s like they know each other better than they ever have.
“Jane,” Amy says, annoyingly placid. “Let me explain.”
“Explain what?” Jane yells, not caring if she’s embarrassing herself or Amy anymore. “You probably told everyone not to vote for me!”
“No, I didn’t. I talked you up. I spent the whole class period talking about how you offered an edgy perspective that our yearbook has never had before.”
“And what?”
“And I think the way you draw your characters … all skinny and ghostly … I think it made the other girls on the committee freak out a little.”
Jane rolls her eyes. Great. Not only did her own sister reject her, but now, she has to admit that Luke was right. Her art is too creepy to be seen. Great.
“Please don’t be so dramatic about it,” Amy says. “You get so dramatic about everything.”
“I wouldn’t have to get dramatic if things went my way once in a while!”
“Jane, I tried. I liked your work the best, and that’s not even because you’re my sister.”
“What did you like about it?”
Amy sighs.
“Do we have to do this here?” she asks.
“A little bit, yeah.”
“I like that you’re really saying something. You have what I think all artists want. A point of view. Richard Palmer … he can draw animals really well, and I think the other girls like that he can draw the mascot. But he doesn’t have a point of view. I don’t even think he wants one.”
Jane rolls her eyes again. She reaches for the paper towel and dabs at her eyes. The towel is tan and rough, like you’d find in a fast food restaurant. She doesn’t care. Not now.
“That’s what I wanted to share with people,” Jane says. “A point of view. I mean … all cartoonists are propagandists, I guess. I just figured I was rallying for the right side.”
Amy smiles. Dammit, Jane does, too. Sometimes, she forgets that Amy is smart.
“Jane, I’m really sorry about this,” she says, and Jane knows she means it. “But you have to believe me about this, OK?”
“I believe you tried to convince everyone else to pick me.”
“No, not that. Not just that. You have to believe me that your art matters.”
Jane nods. It’s probably the nicest thing Amy has ever said to her.
“I should probably get back to class,” she says.
“What for?” Amy asks. “Don’t you already speak French?”
“Sure, but if I’m not there, people will talk.”
“I know what you mean.”
For a second, Jane thinks about hugging Amy, right there in the downstairs school bathroom. But she doesn’t. She and Amy … they’re more than this conversation, more than hugs, more than even family. Maybe there’s a word for it. As Jane walks back upstairs to her French class, the best she can find is sisters.
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scotianostra · 9 months
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21st September 1745 saw The Battle of Prestonpans.
Leaving Edinburgh on the 20th, and joined by Grants of Glenmorriston. Prince Charles put himself at the head of the army and sending forward all his 50 horse cavalry as an advance guard. They marched by Musselburgh to the brow of Carberry Hill, by Falside Castle through Tranent, and lay all night on the high moorland at the east of that village.
General Cope had formed the redcoat army on the low ground between the sea and the high road half-way between Prestonpans and Cockenzie, and south of these villages. The Prince slept on the field, 'lying on the ground without any covering but his plaid'.
At three in the morning the Highlanders marched down towards the sea, crossed a morass, and formed a of battle to the east of Cope. 'In seven or eight minutes' the battle was over. Cope's infantry was all either killed, wounded, or taken prisoner, and many of the Highland prisoners enlisted with the Prince. The Prince spent the night at Pinkie House; the army occupied Musselburgh. The Prince sent messages to the Presbyterian clergy to continue their services next day, Sunday, as usual, all but two of the churches decided against holding mass.
The wounded redcoats were treated by their conquerors with a degree of humanity which might have been well imitated by the regular troops on a subsequent occasion. The conduct of the Prince has been praised and that of his Lieutenant General, Lord George Murray, was no less kind. a party, whose wounds were not very severe, was conducted by Lord George to Musselburgh, he walking by their side, and allowing some of them to use his horses. At Musselburgh he obtained accommodation for them in an empty house, and slept beside them that night, to protect them from any violence on the part of his troops.
The Clanranald journalist says: 'Whatever notion our Low-country people may entertain of the Highlanders, I can attest they gave many proofs this day of their humanity and mercy. Not only did I often hear our common clansmen ask the soldiers if they wanted quarter, and not only did we, the officers, exert our utmost pains to save those who were stubborn, or who could not make themselves understood, but I saw some of our private men, after the battle, run to Port Seton for ale and other liquors to support the wounded. As one proof for all, of my own particular observation, I saw a Highlander carefully, and with patient kindness, carry a poor wounded soldier on his back into a house, where he left him, with a sixpence to pay his charges. In all this,' adds the journalist, 'we followed not only the dictates of humanity, but also the orders of our Prince, who acted in everything as the true father of his country.'
Of the Highlanders themselves, only thirty were killed, including three officers, and about seventy or eighty wounded.
Whatever kindness was offered to the Government wounded was not extended to the slain, anything of use was taken from their bodies as the spoils of war "Rough old Highlanders were seen going with the fine shirts of the English officers over the rest of their clothes, while little boys went strutting about with large gold-laced cocked-hats on their heads, and bandoleers dangling down to their heels"
When the search for spoil has ceased, the Highlanders began to collect their provisions. They fixed their mess-room in one of the houses of Tranent, and, sending out through neighbouring parks, seized such sheep as they could conveniently catch to feed the army.
The battle greatly boosted the morale of all Stuart supporters, and more recruits were soon gained in Scotland. At this point, the campaign was going the Stuarts' way, by December they had reached Derby and a decision had to made.
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