roses–and–rue:
“ 1850s-1860s archery outfit.
Look at the cute little pocket diary hanging from her belt!
”

roses–and–rue:

1850s-1860s archery outfit.

Look at the cute little pocket diary hanging from her belt!

galina-ulanova:
““Devon Teuscher in Cathy Marston’s Jane Eyre (ABT, 2019)
” ”

galina-ulanova:

Devon Teuscher in Cathy Marston’s Jane Eyre (ABT, 2019)

etherealacademia:

image

just figured out that all my everyman classics from 1906 have different quotes on their title pages

etherealacademia:

image
image

for more than a thousand years sad Ophelia

has passed, a white phantom, down the long black river

Anonymous asked:

if you don’t mind me asking, why are you glad you didn’t get a secret history tattoo? (I personally did not like the book / especially the fandom but I am curious your feelings)

I loved tsh. It really shaped my late teens and marked a period of my life I look back on tenderly. I read it when I was 17 or 18 and it rekindled my passion for literary fiction. It’s my late best friend’s favourite book. But I miss when my associations with the book felt more sacred and personal, when I only knew 2 people irl who had read it, and the story and characters existed entirely in my head. Now I’m old (22). I’ve graduated. I’ve been exposed to too much secret history discourse on TikTok and I’m tired. I don’t want to be associated with the tsh fandom. Having a quote or something on my body forever would seem incredibly impersonal now because it feels like it’s become a much more generic book, or perhaps I only think that bc I’ve outgrown it