V&A: Wedding dress outfit consisting of an embroidered silk satin dress and tulle veil by Norman
Hartnell (1901 – 1979), 1933
elizamoved-deactivated20150227:
when we compare the present life of man on earth with that time of which we have no knowledge, it seems to me like a swift flight of a single sparrow through a banquet hall on a winter’s day. after a few moments of comfort, he vanishes from sight into the wintry world from which he came. even so, man appears on earth for a little while, but of what went before this life or what will follow, we know nothing.
it’s not really that the things i like are that niche ; it’s more that the way all my hyperfixations align is very…niche.
*reaps*
*sows*

“One suspects, after reviewing the literature, that Henry is too large and complex a figure to fit any single canvas, to be grasped as a whole at once. This, perhaps, is why Henry continues to fascinate. Whether the classical king of beasts worthy of respect and praise, or the predator, a Machiavellian creature of self will and unseemly appetie, More’s ‘lion’ may have known and used his strength much more effectively and completely than More suspected. Yet the image of a prince hard to rule, by any man or even by himself, a bit erratic and more than a bit dangerous, may be another source of the historical fascination with this man.
Not even the modern psychologist can pin down Henry. He remains a bit of an enigma, and no matter how well we understand his age, how closely we study his actions, perhaps he will always remain so. Each generation writes its own history, for its own purposes, and so each must find its own understanding of Henry VIII. Part lion, part fox, Henry the man and the king remains a key piece in the unfinished puzzle of the sixteenth century. Whether one admires or abhors, still Henry must be taken account of. That there has been so little agreement on his character is perhaps history’s highest accolade.
As Oscar Wilde once quipped, the only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about. Wherever his shade now rests, Henry should have no complaints.” [ x ]
more calling henry viii ‘the lion’ and chapuys saying anne boleyn was ‘braver than a lion’…

Botticelli’s Venus as part of a slide show on buildings during the Festival of Lights in Lyon, France.














