“Would you take him back?” She hesitated and placed her hand over her heart. She let out a deep sigh “You know I cried uncontrollably every day for weeks. I sobbed and screamed, begging for the pain to go away. I prayed so hard, so fucking hard for him to come back to me. Maybe if he reached out to me durning those days I would’ve taken him back in a heartbeat.” “But he didn’t” “One day I just grew tired of crying myself to sleep and feeling so damn exhausted in the morning. I was tired of walking around feeling nothing and everything all at once. I was sick of being broken while he was perfectly okay.” “That day I realized if he truly did care for me, truly loved me he wouldn’t have caused me that much pain and sorrow. He ran out of chances, he ran out of time, he ran out of my love.”
“to answer your question: no” (via damagedlips)
So I’ll remain within your reign, until my thoughts can travel somewhere new… and I wonder if you wonder about me too.
What if… Alternate ending of “War and Peace”, wedding of Natasha & Andrei. source: https://vk.com/vivlinggirl
#babyDickens #Grantchester
I saw your eyes In the sunrise I lost you again In my favorite sunset
k.m (via fluohrine)
Endings are…tremendously painful as they are beautiful. Endings are the beginning of a new dawn, as they are the last scene of a story. They represent a turn, a change, something brand new - As we transform, and we move forward - as we’re all meant to do. Endings are taught to be sad - and they can be. But endings can also signify triumph over catastrophe.
Rhonda Elnaggar (via rhondaelnaggar)
Elegant and comfy conversation seating.
A Scene from Milton’s ‘Comus’ (exh.1844). Charles Robert Leslie (English, 1794-1859). Oil paint on canvas. Tate.
Seated on an enchanted chair, the Lady is immobilised, and Comus accosts her, holding a necromancer’s wand, he offers a vessel with a drink that would overpower her. Comus urges the Lady to “be not coy” and drink from his magical cup (representing sexual pleasure and intemperance), but she repeatedly refuses, arguing for the virtuousness of temperance and chastity.
A woman like that spreads happiness wherever she goes. You’re a lucky dog, Andrei!