The Sea (c. 1865) - Gustave Courbet

The Sea (c. 1865) - Gustave Courbet

The Sea (c. 1865) - Gustave Courbet

More Posts from Wanderingscribe309 and Others

2 weeks ago
Had To Make This After I Saw The Helldivers News.
Had To Make This After I Saw The Helldivers News.

Had to make this after I saw the Helldivers news.


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3 days ago
Pantheon, Rome -- September 16th, 2024
Pantheon, Rome -- September 16th, 2024
Pantheon, Rome -- September 16th, 2024
Pantheon, Rome -- September 16th, 2024
Pantheon, Rome -- September 16th, 2024
Pantheon, Rome -- September 16th, 2024
Pantheon, Rome -- September 16th, 2024
Pantheon, Rome -- September 16th, 2024

Pantheon, Rome -- September 16th, 2024

Etsy


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5 days ago
Space Godzilla Attacks The Space Station

Space Godzilla attacks the space station


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1 week ago

It puzzles me when people cite LOTR as the standard of “simple” or “predictable” or “black and white” fantasy. Because in my copy, the hero fails. Frodo chooses the Ring, and it’s only Gollum’s own desperation for it that inadvertently saves the day. The fate of the world, this whole blood-soaked war, all the millennia-old machinations of elves and gods, comes down to two addicts squabbling over their Precious, and that is precisely and powerfully Tolkien’s point. 

And then the hero goes home, and finds home a smoking desolation, his neighbors turned on one another, that secondary villain no one finished off having destroyed Frodo’s last oasis not even out of evil so much as spite, and then that villain dies pointlessly, and then his killer dies pointlessly. The hero is left not with a cathartic homecoming, the story come full circle in another party; he is left to pick up the pieces of what was and what shall never be again. 

And it’s not enough. The hero cannot heal, and so departs for the fabled western shores in what remains a blunt and bracing metaphor for death (especially given his aged companions). When Sam tells his family, “Well, I’m back” at the very end, it is an earned triumph, but the very fact that someone making it back qualifies as a triumph tells you what kind of story this is: one that is too honest to allow its characters to claim a clean victory over entropy, let alone evil. 

“I can’t recall the taste of food, nor the sound of water, nor the touch of grass. I’m naked in the dark. There’s nothing–no veil between me and the wheel of fire. I can see him with my waking eyes.”

So where’s this silly shallow hippie fever-dream I’ve heard so much about? It sounds like a much lesser story than the one that actually exists.


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2 weeks ago
Lead Them To Paradise.
Lead Them To Paradise.
Lead Them To Paradise.

Lead them to paradise.


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4 days ago
The Seine At Bougival In Winter (1872) By Alfred Sisley

The Seine at Bougival in Winter (1872) by Alfred Sisley


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6 days ago

Hell yeah.

Just ‘cause Sometimes, You Need To See A Swastika Get Blown Up.

Just ‘cause sometimes, you need to see a swastika get blown up.


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wanderingscribe309 - Wandering Scribe
Wandering Scribe

“We had to recognize that our generation was more to be trusted than theirs. They surpassed us only in phrases and in cleverness; the first bombardment showed us our mistake, and under it the world as they had taught it to us broke in pieces. While they continued to write and talk, we saw the dying. While they taught that duty to one’s country is the greatest thing, we already knew that death-throes are stronger. But for all that we were no mutineers, no deserters, no cowards.We loved our country as much as they; we went courageously into every action; but also we distinguished the false from true, we had suddenly learned to see. And we saw that there was nothing of their world left. We were all at once terribly alone; and alone we must see it through.“

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