Giver of Sweetness

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
themischiefoftad
mythaelogy

“I once asked my friends if they’d ever held things that gave them a spooky sense of history. Ancient pots with three-thousand-year-old thumbprints in the clay, said one. Antique keys, another. Clay pipes. Dancing shoes from WWII. Roman coins I found in a field. Old bus tickets in second-hand books. Everyone agreed that what these small things did was strangely intimate; they gave them the sense, as they picked them up and turned them in their fingers, of another person, an unknown person a long time ago, who had held that object in their hands. You don’t know anything about them, but you feel the other person’s there, one friend told me. It’s like all the years between you and them disappear. Like you become them, somehow.”

Helen Macdonald, H is For Hawk (via existential-celestial)

didoofcarthage
books0977:
“Clio. Jean-Jacques Lagrenée (French, 1739-1821). Oil on canvas.
In Greek mythology, Clio is the muse of history. Like all the muses, she is a daughter of Zeus and the Titaness Mnemosyne. Along with her sisters, she was considered to dwell...
books0977

Clio. Jean-Jacques Lagrenée (French, 1739-1821). Oil on canvas.

In Greek mythology, Clio is the muse of history. Like all the muses, she is a daughter of Zeus and the Titaness Mnemosyne. Along with her sisters, she was considered to dwell either Mount Helicon or Mount Parnassos. Clio, sometimes referred to as “the Proclaimer”, is often represented with an open parchment scroll, a book, or a set of tablets.

whatshouldwecallhomer
sisterofiris:
“finelythreadedsky:
“ thinking about poetry and memory
and how they were right. thousands of years ago they hoped hopelessly that someone, somehow, in days to come would still sing their song and they were right. we do remember. even...
finelythreadedsky

thinking about poetry and memory

and how they were right. thousands of years ago they hoped hopelessly that someone, somehow, in days to come would still sing their song and they were right. we do remember. even when nothing else remains, we remember in poetry.

sisterofiris

εἰ δὲ θανόντων περ καταλήθοντ᾽ εἰν Ἀΐδαο
αὐτὰρ ἐγὼ καὶ κεῖθι φίλου μεμνήσομ᾽ ἑταίρου.

And even if the Dead forget in Hades, even there I will remember my dear companion.

Homer, Iliad, 22.389-390