littlestartopaz:
captoring:
librarianarchy:
I love when small children identify all quadripedal animals as “doggy!”
It always reminds me of the time Plato offered the definition of a human as any “featherless biped” and Diogenes busted into the Academy with a plucked chicken screaming, “BEHOLD A MAN!”
i love the implication you were there when it happened. good times right
@words-writ-in-starlight
But this sounds like EXACTLY the kind of shit Diogenes would pull.
(via littlestartopaz)
Request from @littlestartopaz for Harry/Corlath from the Blue Sword on the music meme.
I got Bleeding Out by Imagine Dragons, so…yeah…that happened. ALL RIGHT HERE WE MOTHERFUCKING GO, goddamn but I love these books.
Corlath
had known what it was to be king since his father’s death when he was a young
man, only just eighteen. He had known he
would fight a war for even longer, since before his kelar came to him—maybe he’d known it forever, maybe it was what
his mother sang to him at his birth and whispered to him when he was wakeful at
night. The first time he tasted the
Meeldtar, it snatched him away from himself and brought him visions of Thurra
and his fierce white stallion, streaked with blood and battle rage. When he came back, he dropped the leather
pouch as if his hands were suddenly as weak as a sickly child’s, and he wept
for the terror that was not his and the battle he had seen, and his father had
soothed him with a gentle hand and quiet voice.
It
was not until he was on the field before the Bledfi Gap, his soldiers holding
well against the mere trickle of Northerners coming through, and he felt the
prickle of his kelar stirring, that
he understood that old vision. It was
not his battle, no—but it was his terror.
Keep reading
holy-crap-someone-finally:
equestrianrepublican:
maknbacn:
the-vashta-nerada:
bitterempress:
1800’s French Military Uniform

Today’s Military Uniforms

where did all the style go
where was the time when you could just
out-fab your opponents
do you really think it’s a good idea to take military advice from the French
REBLOGGING BECAUSE OF EVERYTHING OMFG
Historically the “style” died in 1914 because the French would wear bright blue and red uniforms and the British said “that’s a bad idea” and the French said “we look great” then they got sniped.
I visited a WWI battlefield a few years ago and Canadian soldiers used to wear these metal plates on their backs to show that they weren’t German but they reflected sunlight really well so when they tried to hide they were p much as bright as a goddamn lighthouse
(via cthulhu-with-a-fez)
"Doug and I had this idea of this love token of Uhura’s coming back later in the film to help them find out where she was located. So we had this idea of a radioactive mineral. We saw the humor that Spock is basically keeping track of her! But we didn’t have a name for it, so we reached out to the guys who created Memory Alpha, which is this Star Trek Wikipedia. It was an exhaustive, invaluable resource for Doug and I since we would fact-check everything, like what’s inside of a frozen torpedo or what year the first annex vessel made its maiden voyage. And we wrote to the guys and we said “Look, we have this thing and it needs a name, and we’d like you to be part of this movie and have your name in the credits, can you name it for us?” and they came back in about two hours with a really detailed, etymological breakdown of the word VULCYA in its syllabic structure, where it was from, what part of Vulcan, how it had evolved, etc. It just goes to show how awesome Star Trek fans can be. We just wanted a name, but fine, we’ll take this encyclopedia of the word and use it in the film. It was a nice way to include the fans in this 50th Anniversary. If it weren’t for the fans, the show would’ve been cancelled in its third season. It’s been kept alive by those people."
— Simon Pegg about Uhura’s necklace from star trek beyond (via spockuhuralove)
(Source: nationalboardofreview.org, via windbladess)
just-shower-thoughts:
The entire purpose of a bayonet is to bring a knife to a gun fight.
Redoubt 9, Battle of Yorktown. AKA that one time Alexander Hamilton led an entire battalion of soldiers with nothing but bayonets against the fully armed British. He had half the casualties as any of the battalions attacking with guns.
(via windbladess)
bikiniarmorbattledamage:
moonlovingvampire:
jammy-lannistray:
can we take a second to ponder on the fact that a kids movie did lady armor better than the entire film and comic industry
guess who i’m talking about
did you guess? Well you’re fucking WRONG because it’s Susan goddamn Pevensie

They gave her light armor, appropriate for a small archer:chainmail, an arm brace, chest plate, and a light skirt she can easily run around murderizing dudes in the face in
her hair is also only loose in the promo pictures because Susan is fucking busy not dying because her hair was flying into her eyeballs so she braids that shit back

her mail shirt is also loose enough that it doesn’t impede her arm movements it’s almost like she’s dressed for a fight wow

I like the pinks and purples under her bitchin as hell leather armor here, because you don’t have to be masculine to shoot someone in the goddamn face
@bikiniarmorbattledamage look, good armor, on a girl
I feel it’s a worrying statement about the state of media when a movie set in a universe where wardrobes can literally be trans-dimensional portals for the sake of narrative convenience has one of the better examples of making fantasy female armor that is styled around something other than sex appeal.
Because while one could, if really determined, pick out all the points by which this armor is not “really functional” the fact is that it does convey a sense of readiness and being larger than life… without resorting to the usual tropes.
- wincenworks
(Source: merianymerosmartell, via windbladess)