composers as random gifs/images i have on my phone for no reason
tchaikovsky:
sibelius:
schoenberg:
bernstein:
shostakovich:
stravinsky:
beethoven:
bach:
mozart:
schumann:
Hahahaha
we're not kids anymore.
Cosimo Galluzzi

Product Placement
One Nice Bug Per Day
NASA
untitled

tannertan36
Three Goblin Art

Kaledo Art

Origami Around

pixel skylines

Kiana Khansmith

Andulka

oozey mess
trying on a metaphor
taylor price
sheepfilms
Keni

seen from Canada

seen from Brazil

seen from Brazil
seen from Brazil

seen from Malaysia
seen from Brazil

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from France
seen from Iraq
seen from Chile
seen from Brazil
seen from Indonesia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Albania
seen from Russia

seen from Germany

seen from South Korea
seen from Malaysia
@camillathenerd
composers as random gifs/images i have on my phone for no reason
tchaikovsky:
sibelius:
schoenberg:
bernstein:
shostakovich:
stravinsky:
beethoven:
bach:
mozart:
schumann:
Hahahaha

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They cut down a tree today
Didn't know it was loved
It was a hard-to-love tree
Never had a leaf, no bird dared come near
They tried all ways and waited for long enough
No one could understand
Of all the green trees, heart chose the leafless one to hold dearest
I could never explain my love...
Like I could never explain how
To experience loss and still love like everything lives forever.
The storm inside reaches out to the storm outside
I feel you...
I long so much to dance in the clouds with the lightnings
I am weak. No, I am strong!
Who is this person that I am?
I want to run like the fastest wind through the forest
Then dive to the deepest of the ocean
I haven't lost the little girl I was
I, I, I, I,
Everything I write is full of I's
I am selfish. I am kind.
I'd walk over the dead bodies but
I don't want to hurt the grass below
I whispered to the storm:
You and I are the same
I am the storm
I am the silent storm
I am the silent storm
To love so many poets but
I can only write like myself
I want to stop and read someone else's but
Only I can write like myself...
I write what scares me.
I feel like the Moon
Half bright, half hidden
I'm the best friend that
You don't have to understand
Why am I like this?
Being too honest
But don't care how you interpret
Imagine me every way
I have no need to be understood
But can't tell a lie!
The stars are always the same
Moon is different every place
You can't see the real Moon but
You can feel it, sometimes.
You may be right, I don't care much
You are right, too, I feel everything, intensely, in great depth
I am so soft but you can't hold, and you can't force
I never intended to be like this, I just am...
I feel like the Moon
Too loud, too silent
Half of me is no longer me...
Beethoven be like: MUST be DRAMATIC! MUST be DRAMATIC! MUST. BANG. HEAD!!!
đ đ đ

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Tag yourself as music keys (as told by the Signature Series CBC)
C major: Childlike, carefree, unselfconscious
C minor: Misunderstood genius, misanthrope, caught in a heroic struggle
D-flat major: Has a dreamy smile, makes jewelry, innocent
C-sharp minor: Mysterious, secretive, doesn't open up to others
D major: Overachiever, cheerful, enthusiastic
D minor: Angry at the world, betrayed by friends, alone
E-flat major: Respected by others, popular, a great leader
E-flat minor: Quirky, strange, not very well known
E major: Delightful, charming, a morning person
E minor: Proud, likes drama, needy
F major: Calm, in control of things, secretly has an iron will beneath that sweet smile
F minor: Not to be messed with, tough, never gives up
F-sharp major: Friendly, gives hugs, has lovely plants
F-sharp minor: Shy, stays home a lot, scared of other people
G major: Playful, naive, a great sport
G minor: Stubborn, gets into arguments, smart
A-flat major: Kind, always pays for dinner, bakes cookies for friends
G-sharp minor: Weary, moves gracefully, 100% done with society
A major: Can't keep still, impatient, capricious
A minor: Has unfulfilled dreams, cannot let go of the past, mournful
B-flat major: Nerd, nature enthusiast, loves to gaze at the stars
B-flat minor: Doesn't show feelings, gets uncomfortable at the mention of feelings, actually has feelings
B major: Loves weekends, sleeps in, operates on a different internal clock
B minor: Gloomy, likes art and wine, hides under a blanket
Hope: Dad lives a thousand years, does weird ritual to become the only Vampire who can procreate. Mom moves from-
Elijah: *Sighs*
Hope: -foster home to foster home to end up up in Mystic Falls. When dad got sad and drunk-
Elijah: Okay-
Hope: -had a one nighter with mom-
Elijah: We don't have to-
Hope: -who was basically hate banging him-
Elijah: We /honestly/-
Hope: Then boom. Loophole.
Elijah: Yeah.
Hope: Miracle baby.
Hope's got a good sense of humor đđđ
OMG Jefferson was such a shopaholic! You need serious help, Jeff!!!
Gotta hand it to John Trumbull for saying âFuck youâ to everyone who told him not to and going to London in 1780 to study art during the war. Inevitably, after the execution of John AndĂŠ and the subsequent public outrage, Trumbull was captured and imprisoned for suspicions of treason because of the fact that, yâknow, he was a former Continental soldier and aide-de-camp of Washington that had just waltzed into England to take painting lessons, but, hey, when you want something, go for it. He was released eight months later on the condition that he leave England immediately.
âThe calmness with which this ex-aide of the rebel Commander-in-Chief walked into the lionâs mouth merely because he wished to study art was regarded, probably, by the British as the act of a lunatic.â -Historian John Fitzpatrick
Wowww
I think all Gilmore Girls fans can agree that Rory Gilmore is the original studyblr! If Iâm having a chill study session, Iâll play an old episode where she is extra motivated or there is a big focus on academics. The following are my go-tos!
SPOILER ALERT
I wrote short descriptions with each episode so SPOILER ALERT for everyone who hasnât seen or is still watching Gilmore Girls!Â
S01E02- âThe Lorelaiâs First Day at Chiltonâ
Rory starts at a new prestigious school. She has to deal with proving herself academically.
S01E04- âThe Deer Huntersâ
This episode deals with academic failure and studying hard to move past it.Â
S02E02- âHammers and Veilsâ
Rory has anxiety over not having enough extra-curricular activities for college applications.Â
S02E04- âThe Road Trip to Harvardâ
Rory visits her dream school and gets a good look into college life.Â
S02E18- âBack in the Saddle Againâ
Rory has a challenging group project.Â
S03E03- âApplication Anxietyâ
Rory receives her Harvard application and gets stressed over the competition.Â
S03E08- âLet the Games Beginâ
Rory visits Yale.
S03E16- âThe Big Oneâ
Rory has to give a speech and has to comfort a friend who doesnât get into her dream school. Rory also receives her college letters.Â
S03E17- âA Tale of Poes and Fireâ
Rory picks her college.Â
S03E22- âThose Are Strings, Pinocchioâ
Rory graduates high school and deals with paying for college.Â
S04E01- âBallrooms & Biscottiâ
Lorelai and Rory have to deal with the stress of preparing for college.Â
S04E02- âThe Lorelaisâ First Day at Yaleâ
Rory starts college.Â
S04E03-Â âThe Hobbit, the Sofa, and Digger Stilesâ
Rory begins her college shopping period.Â
S04E06- âAn Affair to Rememberâ
Rory has trouble finding a good place to study while she is behind on her class syllabus.
S04E08- âDie, Jerkâ
Rory is told to toughen up her journalistic writing, so she writes a harsh review and faces the consequences.Â
S04E10- âThe Nanny and the Professorâ
Rory participates in the orientation for her school newspaper.Â
S04E14- âThe Incredible Sinking Lorelaisâ
This episode once again deals with academic failure.
S05E10- âBut Not As Cute As Pushkinâ
Rory gives a tour of Yale to a high school student.Â
S05E20- âHow Many Kropogs to Cape Cod?â
Rory starts an internship.
S06E13- âFriday Nightâs Alright for Fightingâ
The student news has to pull a hectic all-nighter to publish the paper.
S06E14- âYouâve Been Gilmoredâ
Rory becomes the editor of her paper.
S06E16- âBridesmaids Revisitedâ
Rory speaks at a journalism panel.Â
S07E21- âUnto the Breachâ
Rory graduates college.
I'll need this!

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- Don't talk about me like you know me. You don't know me! - It is your friends who do not know you, but I do. You are a warrior. Never reckless, never naive, too smart to let fear drive you, precise, quiet, calculating. You will wait for the right time. You will look at all the possible outcomes. Youâll understand what needs to be done. You will pick a side and then you will handle this situation in the manner we both know it needs to be handled. You will burn it down and never look back. Your friends don't know you. They think you're loyal to people. They don't know that you would use them as kindling for the fire if you have to. I know you! I know that you would never allow people to get in the way of what is right, of your fundamental belief that the republic must stand at all cost. I know you because the apple does not fall far from the tree, Olivia. Poison though it may be.
Why is Richard Feynman dead? Why couldn't he live forever? I could be best friends with someone like him!!!
Men are rather reasoning than reasonable animals, for the most part governed by their passion.
Alexander Hamilton told James Bayard
The profilic Hamilton was now writing pseudonymous commentaries on his own pseydonymous essays.
Alexander Hamilton - Ron Chernow
You have to quit, youâre not good.
If I quit, Iâll never be good.

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I swear to myself I won't start another book until I've finished all my currently reading books!!!Â
I can do this!!! I am strong!!! đđđ
Please talk about Thomas and Martha Jefferson! They seem like such an otp yet there is hardly anything on them! And Thomas gets so much hate now bc of Hamilton.
*MY TIME HAS COME TO SHINE*
i like TJ, but lbh, he acted like an as*hole on many occasions haha. yet, his relationship with Martha is one of the rares things in his life that could redeem him imho. so yessssss: let me talk (A LOT) about the love story of Thomas & Martha Jefferson!!! it will make you cry, i promise
Martha was an accomplished musician who played the pianoforte and spinet, and also sang. When she was 18, she married Bathurst Skelton with whom she had a child named John, but less than two years after the marriage, Bathurst became ill and died in 1768. After the acceptable period of mourning was over, the wealthy and beautiful (all physical accounts of her describe her as such) new widow began attracting many suitors, including Thomas Jefferson. Thomas fell in love with Martha nearly straightaway, however, she did not share the same feelings for him when he first started calling on her. Neither did her father tho, who didnât approve of the lower status Thomas Jeffersonâs interests in his daughter. Thomas proposed to Martha in early 1771, but she did not accept. Thanks to an encouraging letter written to him by a friend, Mrs. Drummond, Thomas continued to pursue the relationship. According to family lore, two men waiting outside the Waylesâ house to see Martha heard her and Thomas, who got there before the other men, playing music and singing together. Upon hearing this, they gave up and went home, realising the tenderness between the two. Bonding over things, such as their mutual love of music and literature, Martha accepted Thomasâ proposal by June, 1771. Unlike marriages of generations past that considered monetary and social reasons for tying the knot over romantic feelings, the couple was one of a growing number of couples getting married out of love.Their wedding was planned for later that summer, however, the bad luck in child rearing that followed the Eppes-Wayles-Jefferson families around struck and caused them to postpone. Marthaâs son died at just three and a half years old. The heartbroken Martha and Thomas rescheduled the wedding. During their courtship, Thomas Jeffersonâs passion for Martha was so great that it caused him to ignore some of his revolutionary principles. In a blatant violation of the colonial boycott of British goods, Thomas ordered a âforte-pianoâ from Englandâalong with special instructions about its construction to make sure it would be âworthy the acceptance of a lady for whom I intend itâ. Thomas also had is work in progress, Monticello, renovated so it would be less of a bachelor pad and more of a family home.  On December 23, he wrote out a wedding bond for the couple. In it, he described Martha as a âspinsterâ, later crossed out and replaced with âwidow,â most likely by Marthaâs brother-in-law and Thomasâ witness while writing the bond. The Skelton connection was not something Jefferson thought much about. Captivated by visions of their new life together, he had unconsciously edited Pattyâs first husband out of the picture in his preparations for the wedding. On January 1, 1772, Martha and Thomas were married at Marthaâs familyâs home. After the wedding, to have their honeymoon at Monticello, they made the 100-mile trip in one of the worst snowstorms to hit Virginia. Eight miles from their destination, their carriage bogged down in 2â3 feet of snow and they had to proceed on horseback, riding the remaining distance over a rough mountain track. Arriving at Monticello late at night after the servants had banked the fires and retired, the couple settled in the freezing one-room, twenty-foot-square brick building, still known by its nickname, the âHoneymoon Cottageâ.Thomas lit a fire in the fireplace to get some warmth and they toasted their new home with a leftover half-bottle of french wine hidden behind a shelf of books, and âsong and merriment and laughterâ.Of his beloved wife, Jefferson once wrote, âin every scheme of happiness she is placed in the foreground of the picture as the principal figure. Take that away, and there is no picture for me.âNine months after she and Thomas were married, Martha gave birth to the coupleâs first of six children, also named Martha but called âPatsy.â Of the six kids, only Patsy and another daughter, Mary, survived childhood, and Patsy is the only one to live a long life. The loss of so many children took its toll on Martha, as did the pregnancies and childbirths themselves (Martha is described as being frail and her health declined with each pregnancy, as they all were physically tough and left her bedridden). When Thomas was Governor of Virginia, she twice had to flee Richmond and Monticello with her children when the British raided both locations. The state of her health during and post-pregnancies kept Thomas as close to home as possible so he could be with his ailing wife, sometimes choosing local Virginia politics over national roles. John Hancock, president of the Continental Congress, asked him to go on a diplomatic trip to Paris, which he declined so he could stay home with Martha. During the summer of 1776, Thomas had been receiving letters from Martha asking him to come home from the Continental Congress as soon as he could because she was very ill. On September 1, 1776, Thomas Jefferson, the only delegate from the state of Virginia still in Philadelphia, left his state with no vote to attend to his wife. His fears were not unfounded âMartha, like her mother and Mary at the age of 25, would eventually succumb to the difficulties of childbirth.When she was in good health, Martha and Thomas spent their time reading with each other and performing musical duets for themselves and guests. They each seem to be equally devoted to the other. Martha also proved to be very adept at running a home and managing a large plantation.  As Jon Meacham noticed in his biography âThomas Jefferson: The Art of Powerâ, Thomas found âIn Martha, the most congenial of companions, a woman who spoke his language. Their nights were filled with music and wine and talkâtalk of everything. They seemed to have fully shared their lives with each other. He confided in her about politics (âŚ) Smart and strong willed, she liked having her way, was not a woman of retiring nature or of quiet views. She had a mind of her own.âDuring the Revolutionary War, âladiesâ associationsâ begun in many states with the goal of collecting money and making clothing for the Continental Army. In 1780, Martha Washington nominated Martha Jefferson for the head of Virginiaâs ladies association. In a letter to Eleanor Conway Madison (the only surviving complete letter written by Martha), she says, âI undertake with chearfulness the duty of furnishing to my country women an opportunity of proving that they also participate of those virtuous feelings with gave birth to it.âIn May, 1782, Martha gave birth to her last child and never recovered from the ordeal. Thomas wrote a letter to close friend, James Monroe, stating, âMrs. Jefferson has added another daughter to our family.  She has ever since and still continues very dangerously ill.â *WARNING: tearjerker anecdote* While on her deathbed, Martha and Thomas copied lines from one of their favorite novels, âTristram Shandyâ by Laurence Sterne. As she lay dying in their bed at just 33, Martha began writing a passage from the book but too weak, Thomas finished it, transforming the passage into a final dialogue between husband and wife:   [written by Martha] Time wastes too fast: every letter I trace tells me with what rapidity life follows my pen. The days and hours of it are flying over our heads like clouds of windy day, never to return - more every thing presses on -   [written by Thomas] and every time I kiss thy hand to bid adieu, every absence which follows it, are preludes to the eternal separation which we are shortly to make!It seems like Thomas didnât have the strength to finish the entire quote: âHeaven have mercy upon us both.On September 6, 1782, a devastated Thomas could only bring himself to write simply in his account book, âMy dear wife died this day at 11:45 A.M.â  He was inconsolable in his loss and âwas led from the room almost in a state of insensibility by his sister Mrs. Carr, who, with great difficulty, got him into his library where he faintedâ âand not for a brief moment. Jefferson âremained so long insensible that they feared he would never revive.â After the funeral, he withdrew to his room for three weeks, pacing constantly, only allowing his sister to visit him.He was incoherent with grief, and perhaps surrendered to rage. There is a hint that he lost all control, according to his daughter Patsy, the âwitness to many violent bursts of griefâ : âthe scene that followed (âŚ) when, almost by stealth, I entered his room by night, to this day I dare not describe to myselfâ. He destroyed all her letters and didnât keep any of her belongings -just a few survived-. In a letter to his sister-in-law, he even was alluding to the possibility of suicide: âThis miserable kind of existence is really too burdensome to be borne (âŚ) I could not wish its continuance a momentâ, but he would endure for their children. Jefferson remained âinconsolableâ â a word used by many biographers and Jeffersonâs contemporaries to describe his condition â for months. He sobbed deeply at night, broke down when he tried to appear in public and talk about his deceased wife, and news of his grief and shattered condition spread through the colony.Not until after long weeks did Jefferson begin to resume a normal life when he wrote, âemerging from that stupor of mind which had rendered me as dead to the world as was she whose loss occasioned it. All my plans of comfort and happiness were reversed by a single event.â Jefferson erected a marble tombstone for his wife at Monticello, with the inscription stating she had been âtorn from him by death.â On her gravestone, as a part of the epitaph, Jefferson added lines from Homerâs The Iliad: Nay if even in the house of Hades the dead forget their dead, yet will I even there be mindful of my dear comrade ; and below: This monument of his love is inscribed.Keeping a promise he allegedly made to Martha, he never remarried. Thomas never fully recovered form her death. He never mentioned his wife, even to his closest firends, and almost 40 years after her death, he still referred to her in his autobiography as âthe cherished companion of my life, in whose affections, unabated on both sides, I had lived the last ten years in unchequered happiness.âAfter Jeffersonâs death, in a secret drawer beside his bed, a folded paper with the âTristram Shandyâ text written by Martha on her deathbed was found âa lock of her hair carefully hidden insideâ. Its wear showed that it was opened and refolded often.
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