cttos <33 pinterest
baotuquan趵突泉, jinan济南, shandong province in china by 凡不烦
extremely so
I don't have hot takes anymore - life is just beautiful and I am lucky
— Anaïs Nin, The Diary of Anaïs Nin, Vol. 1: 1931-1934
no cause id totally want to do this with my friends ( which i dont have)
one time my friend and i came up with a basic “language” called wheat vegetable root. wheat represented every noun. vegetable represented every verb. root represented every adjective. it was very body language based. if my friend beckoned and said “vegetable”, i understood that my friend was telling me to walk with them. if my friend pointed to something and said “wheat”, i understood that they were showing me something. if they said “root wheat” and smiled, they’re saying this thing is good. if they say “root wheat” and frown, they’re saying this thing is bad. we spent a whole day talking like this and drove the rest of our friends insane.
when Sharon Olds said "If I pass a mirror, I turn away, I do not want to look at her, and she does not want to be seen."
Work as hard as you can and then be happy in the knowledge you couldn’t have done any more.
“Blueberries” from Devotions by Mary Oliver.
to include in your poem/story
1. Monstrance: A vessel created to display the consecrated Host, the body of Christ. They were first created in response to the Feast of Corpus Christ established in 1263 that enabled the faithful to see and venerate the consecrated Host on a crescent moon-shaped mount. Monstrances were used in liturgical processions, especially on feast days, and were also placed on the altar.
2. Ogee Arch or Ogive: An arch with a pointed apex, formed by the intersection of two S curves usually confined to decoration and not used in arcade arches. Ogee arches were used only in the late Gothic period.
3. Pediment: A triangular space above a window or entrance. Originally, the triangular space was formed by the end of a gable roof and later was used decoratively.
4. Quatrefoil: An ornamental form which has four lobes or foils. It may resemble a four-petaled flower.
5. Refectory: Dining room in a monastery.
Refectory at Mont-Saint-Michael, France
6. Scriptorium: Area in a monastery where books and documents were written, copied, and illuminated.
7. Trefoil: An ornamental form which has three lobes or foils.
8. Trumeau Figure: Statue decorating a trumeau (i.e., vertical architectural member between the leaves of a doorway. Trumenus were often highly decorated). Usually this was a human figure, usually a religious personage.
9. Tympanum (plural, tympana): The semicircular area enclosed by the arch above the lintel of an arched entranceway. This area is often decorated with sculpture in the Romanesque and Gothic periods.
10. West End: The area of the church opposite the east end. The west end usually functions as the main entrance to the church. When one enters a church from the west end, the left side is the north side, and the right is the south side.
If these writing notes helped with your poem/story, please tag me. Or leave a link in the replies. I'd love to read them!
Words Related to Medieval Art & Architecture (pt. 1)
What a year this week has been.
Snoopy rice & Miffy bao buns, pizza, and rice by matchaoats