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#19th January
helga-oko · 4 months
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Congratulations to all fans and simply music enjoyers on World Beatles Day!
Thank you, Beatles!💖
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hawleywilby · 4 months
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Andrew Scott and Paul Mascal on the 19th january, bbcone!!!
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poetry-lair · 4 months
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Hi everyone!!
Yesterday (19th January) was the birthday of Edgar Allan Poe and to celebrate this event,
I wanted to share with this video with the aesthetic that reminds his works, with some illustrations of his original writings mostly made by Harry Clarke and Gustave Doré, and one of my favorite quote from his Wonderful poem “Dream within a dream”.
What is your favorite stories, poems or quotes of Edgar Allan Poe and What can you say (feelings, opinions, memories, etc.) about him?
Let me know in the comments.
I hope you like and I wish you have a Wonderful day!!
Official Instagram’s Link: https://www.instagram.com/reel/C2VhzByIMwB/?igsh=MXJlM2l1eXI2cnl0ag==
All the rights of the images, effects and GIF belong to their respective owners.
Made by Creative Cloud Express: Design and Canva
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purpleleafsyt · 3 months
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Prime Empire icons!!! These took me so long that in between the Jay and the other two I changed my rendering process entirely lmao
Feel free to use these with credit. If you want :D
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tygerland · 5 months
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Vincent van Gogh Landscape with Snow. 1888. Oil on canvas: 38 × 46 cm (15 × 18 in).
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favficbirthdays · 4 months
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Happy Birthday
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Adora/She-Ra (19th January)
She-Ra and the Princesses of Power
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chic-a-gigot · 3 months
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La Mode illustrée, no. 4, 28 janvier 1872, Paris. Toilettes de Mme Bréant-Castel, 28 rue Neuve des Petits Champs. Collection of the Rijksmuseum, Netherlands
Robe de dessous en satin blanc. Première jupe en tarlatane blanche, avec volant plissé ayant 25 centimètres de hauteur. Au-dessus de ce volant une bordure grecque en velours rouge, se terminant par des bouclettes de même velours. Seconde jupe pareille garnie de même (volant de moitié moins haut que le précédent), relevée de chaque côté. Corsage décolleté en velours rouge à petites basques et manches courtes. Collier en corail rouge. Dans les cheveux diadème en grenades.
Jupon de faye fris bleu, garni d'un volant froncé ayant 35 centimètres de hauteur. Au-dessus de ce volant, des pattes en velours de même couleur, fixées par un grand bouton d'argent. Au-dessus des pattes, une ruche en faye. Tunique garnie de même. Corsage montant à basques, et manches à volant avec même garniture. Sous-manches larges en dentelle.
White satin underdress. First skirt in white tarlatan, with pleated flounce 25 centimeters high. Above this flounce a Greek border in red velvet, ending in loops of the same velvet. Second similar skirt trimmed in the same way (ruffle half as high as the previous one), raised on each side. Low-cut red velvet bodice with small peplums and short sleeves. Red coral necklace. Pomegranate tiara in her hair.
Blue Faye Fris petticoat, trimmed with a gathered flounce 35 centimeters high. Above this ruffle, velvet tabs of the same color, attached by a large silver button. Above the legs, a faye ruffle. Tunic trimmed in the same way. High peplum bodice and ruffled sleeves with the same trim. Wide lace undersleeves.
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salmonight · 3 months
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A baby timmy sketch after a week of inactivity
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It just so happens that he and I share a birthday 💀
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todaysdocument · 4 months
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Warrant from President Thomas Jefferson to Secretary of Treasury Albert Gallatin Regarding the Payment to the French Republic for Louisiana Purchase
Record Group 56: General Records of the Department of the Treasury Series: Documents Relating to the Purchase of Louisiana File Unit: Documents Relating to the Purchase of Louisiana, 1803-1804
To Albert Gallatin, Secretary of the Treasury of the United States. Thereas by an act, passed the tenth day of November, in the year of one thousand eight hundred and three, entered " An Act authorizing the creation of a stock to the amount of eleven millions two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for the purpose of carrying into effect the Convention of the 30th of April one thousand eight hundred and three, between the United States of America and the French Republic, and making provision for the payment of the same", it is, among other things, enacted "That for the purpose of carrying into effect the Convention of the thirtieth day of April 1803 between the United States of America and the French Republic, the Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is hereby, authorized to cause to be constituted Certificate of stock signed by the Register of the Treasury, in favor of the French Republic or of it's Assignees, for the sum of Eleven Millions two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, bearing an interest of six per centum per annum, from the time when possession of Louisiana shall have been obtained in conformity with the Treaty of the thirtieth day of April 1803, between the United States of America and the French Republic, and in other respects comformable with the tenor of the Convention aforesaid; and the President of the United States is authorized to cause the said Certificates of stock to be delivered to the Government of France, or to such person or persons as shall be authorized to receive them, in three months at most after the exchange of ratifications of the Treaty aforesaid and after Louisiana shall be taken possession of in the name of the Government of the United States" Now therefore Be
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miehczyslaw · 2 months
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AND THE LORD VISITED EVE WITH A CURSE AND THE CURSE WAS THE CURSE OF B L O O D.
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snowe-zolynn-rogers · 26 days
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Moon: You feeling better, buddy?
Eclipse: *tilts head to look at Moon*
Moon: Not you, you’re too loud.
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favficbirthdays · 4 months
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Happy Birthday
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Soren (19th January)
The Dragon Prince
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chic-a-gigot · 4 months
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Le Petit écho de la mode, no. 3, vol. 19, 17 janvier 1897, Paris. 8. Vivandière du diable, fillette 8 à 10 ans. Ville de Paris / Bibliothèque Forney
(8) Vivandière du diable, fillette 8 à 10 ans. — Jupe courte en satin rouge flamme, découpée en languettes et appliquée de petites têtes noires. Seconde jupe satin noir, garnie galon feu. Corsage cuirasse décolleté, motif flamme sur la poitrine. Jockeys satin noir sur manches ballon courtes. Gants et bas noirs, pantoufles appliquées. Masque noir.
(8) Devil's Vivandière, girl 8 to 10 years old. — Short skirt in flame red satin, cut into tabs and applied with small black heads. Second black satin skirt, trimmed with tan braid. Breastplate bodice, flame motif on the chest. Black satin jockeys on short balloon sleeves. Black gloves and stockings, appliquèd slippers. Black mask.
Matériaux: 2m50 satin rouge, 2m50 satin noir.
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18 more days.
18 more days until you get to see what absolute chaos we do in Hell and the Hazbin Hotel!
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todaysdocument · 4 months
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Memorial of the American Convention for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, signed at Philadelphia, praying that Congress will prohibit the importation of slaves into the Territory of Louisiana, lately ceded to the United States
Record Group 233: Records of the U.S. House of RepresentativesSeries: Records of Early House Select CommitteesFile Unit: Petitions and Memorials, Resolutions of State Legislatures, and Related Documents Which Were Referred to Various Select Committees during the 8th Congress
To the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled - The American Convention for promoting the abolition of Slavery and improving the condition of the African Race beg leave respectfully to propose for your consideration, the utility and propriety of passing such Laws as shall prohibit the importation of Slaves into the Territory of Louisiana lately ceded to the United States. Your Memorialists feel themselves deeply impressed with this important subject, and they deem it their duty to solicit most earnestly your serious attention to the proposition. They believe that wisdom and sound Policy are so intimately united by their Eternal Parent that Man cannot separate them with impunity. If wisdom urge the performance of any particular Act, if it command the formation and establishment of any specific Law, the soundest Policy will be evinced by obedience to that injunction. True Virtue, the Offering of Wisdom, teaches Man to love his fellow Man, and enjoins him to perform all that may be within the compass of his Abilities, for the general happiness of his Species. When national Governments comply with this benevolent and sublime Law, they become the Providential Instruments of national blessings, but when they oppose or disregard its dictates, their Constituents must necessarily feel, sooner or later, all the Calamities which follow such Opposition or Neglect. Our Ancestors have, unhappily, entailed on some of our States, the evils of Slavery. Many of our fellow Citizens in those States, we believe are mournfully sensible of the magnitude of their [Burthen?], but they know and feel that Man may commit Error with more facility than he can eradicate its consequences. Your Memorialists entreat you to reflect on to consider with impartial attention, the dangers and difficulties before you, and beseech you with deep concern, to foreserve the Country, whose regulations depend on your Wisdom, from similar calamities. They also respectfully suggest to you, that while the Constitution of the United States declares all Men equally entitled to Liberty, they cannot conceive our Government as acting consistently with its declarations, if it shall, in any instance, authorize Man to enslave unoffending Man. In compliance with law distinguishing [illegible] of [illegible] national [illegible] a former Congress judged it expedient to introduce among its regulations for the government of the Northwester Territory, a provision resembling that 206 whichwhich your Memorialists now suggest to you. There is another Consideration to which your Memorialists feel themselves bound to call to your attention. While the Governments of Europe are shaken by civil discord, or surrounded by the incalculable cruelties and horrors of national Warfare, a beneficent and overruling Providence has been pleased to preserve for our Country, the blessings of Peace, to grant us new proofs of his goodness, and to place us in a condition of prosperity unrivalled in the records of History. Does it not become the duty of a Nation so crowned with the blessings of Peace and Plenty and Happiness to manifest its gratitude to the whole World by acts of Justice and Virtue? For the true Honor of our Country - from benevolence towards the future possessors of our newly acquired Soil, your Memorialists hope you will hear and grant their request. And with all the respect which is due to the Representatives of a free People, they subscribe themselves cordially your Friends and fellow Citizens. Signed by order, and on behalf of the Convention Matthew Franklin Pres Philadelphia Jany 13th 1804 Attest [illegible] Alsop
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