and I have fallen in love
with salt on my skin.
(Source: tylerknott, via periodprincess)
(Source: tylerknott, via periodprincess)
things that will always be attractive forever
- button up shirt with the sleeves pushed up to the elbows
- freckles
- dimples
- button up shirt
- with the sleeves pushed up
- to the elbows
- 5 o’clock shadow
- bUTTON UP SHIRTS
Hi let me introduce you to my boyfriend
(via allisonimagining)
Once upon a midnight DEAL WITH IT.
I give a fuck, nevermore.
merely a bro, nothing more.
#suddenly there came a swagging as of someone gangsta rapping #rapping at my chamber door
Quoth the raven, “Swag galore”
(Source: venusaurphobia, via luminous-lu)
Spencer Finch
366 (EMILY DICKINSON’S MIRACULOUS YEAR)
2009
This work is based on the year 1862, Emily Dickinson’s annus mirabilis, when she wrote an amazing 366 poems in 365 days. It is a real-time memorial to that year, which burns for exactly one year. The sculpture is comprised of 366 individual candles arranged in linear sequence, each of which burns for 24 hours. The color of each candle matches a color mentioned in the corresponding poem; poems in which no color is mentioned are made out of natural paraffin.
(via fishingboatproceeds)
How and Why We Read: Crash Course English Literature #1
In which John Green kicks off the Crash Course Literature mini series with a reasonable set of questions. Why do we read? What’s the point of reading critically? John will argue that reading is about effectively communicating with other people. Unlike a direct communication though, the writer has to communicate with a stranger, through time and space, with only “dry dead words on a page.” So how’s that going to work? Find out with Crash Course Literature! Also, readers are empowered during the open letter, so that’s pretty cool.
(via fishingboatproceeds)