Most people don't know how to read and analyze literary works.
Because they don't have the tools and skillset to do so (no judgement).
Here's a free Yale course that will teach you how to read and analyze a literary work:
(get an Ivy League education for free)
In this clever marginal illustration, the medieval artist has created the illusion of a piece of rope driven through the page and attached on the other side, to support an added line of text.
(Harley MS 612, f. 232r-v)
https://t.co/JME4dtFiNQ
"i moved out of the city and im so much happier" love that for you but i need see a 1970s arthouse film at 2:30pm on a wednesday in theater with 15 unemployed strangers or i will die
Started calling the middle of a loaf of bread “the king’s bread” and saying things like “a cheddar this fine demands the king’s bread!”
This is just one of the many ways I have scraped joy out of a cold and unaccountable universe.
He’s also solely responsible for Rock On by David Essex sounding the way it does. This song is an outlier. A mainstream boyband heart throb suddenly releasing an impenetrably strange experimental song https://t.co/mCAiafZ7KL
RIP to a legend. He played bass on Lou Reeds “walk on the wild side”. He recorded the part twice on electric and upright, one octave above the other, just so he’d get paid twice. But inadvertently created one of the most memorable bass melodies of all time by doing so
I still miss her and think about her every day. Succession, I will always love you! 🥲 Perhaps getting a rewatch after I finish "Tires" (new, a hoot) and rewatching Wolf Hall for the third time (worth it for Rylance's face alone)