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Carlos Loret @CarlosLoret
Será lo que quieran pero ahora es quién ha callado la boca al corrupto #AscoDeTabasco
Su TEATRO T ya perdió Flow
Don Carlos siga informándonos de la inmundicia de lopez
more adopts i made w the help of my lovely friends !!
i showed them off and loretta and victoria are already claimed but derby and rock are up for grabs !!
dm or comment to claim !!
‘During the conflict (WW1), de Chirico’s art evolved in Italy into the school of Metaphysical Painting, an evolution that this exhibition follows closely, but does not tackle head on.’
A review by Silvia Loreti, to read for FREE: https://t.co/Sjs2sVINe9
"Mucho ruido, pocas nueces". Mi cartón de hoy para tod@s ustedes.
#MoneroHablante
https://t.co/t1NNinKPNr
https://t.co/P8ct1OYi8g
#Loret #Loretito #LoretitoMontajes #LordMontajes #ElDecadente #Loretdemola #SinCredibilidad
@latinus_us @CarlosLoret Loret siempre con un as bajo la manga! 👌😂😂
Hello #FolkloreThursday 🐉
A huge thanks to Crystal @HistoriumU for being our epic host before the break! This is @ShanonSinn hosting the last session of the day 🧐
Today's theme is Folklore of Rivers and Wells! Bring out the nymphs and river monsters !!
Warwick Goble 1912
For today’s @FolkloreThurs: how the classical myth of the nymph Arethusa and the #river-God Alpheus inspired the Elvish love story of Nimrodel and Amroth in The #LordoftheRings: https://t.co/q7xUwVXGzN
(Statue in Ortygia, Sicily; art by LiigaKlavina)
#FolkloreThursday #Tolkien
#FolkloreThursday -River Folklore-
The River Gods were the 3000 sons of the great earth-encircling river Oceanus and his wife Tethys.
They were the brothers of the Oceanids and the fathers of the Naiads.
(Art by Daren Horley)
#FolkloreThursday Reported in 1896
The funeral procession must not cross a river.
Baldwinsville, N. Y.
#TheVictorianBookoftheDead
I had a blast sharing your water wisdom, #FolkloreThursday. This is Crystal @HistoriumU signing off. Get your next tweets ready because @ShanonSinn will be on at 6:30 BST for today’s last session. “Be still like a mountain and flow like a great river." ― Lao Tzu (Image: Stillman)
Jakob's Well, the scene of the conversation between Jesus and the “woman of Samaria” narrated in the Fourth Gospel, is described as being in the neighbourhood of an otherwise unmentioned “city called Sychar.” see also John 4:6 (ESV)#FolkloreThursday
Today's @FolkloreThurs theme is Rivers and Wells! River hags are a common theme in English folklore, with figures such as Peg Powler and Jenny Greenteeth acting as bogeyman-figures who would drown children who came too close to the riverbank.
#illustration #folklorethursday #art
Kawa Akago are the cousins of kappa. They live on the riverbanks and cry out like babies, leading people into the river. When a person is in the river, they’ll knock their legs out from under them, sometimes drowning their victims. #FolkloreThursday Art @matthewmeyerart
For the Cherokee, the world is an island floating on water & suspended from the sky by 4 ropes. One day, the cords will break & the world will sink in the ocean & all will return to water. That is why rivers are sacred & people bath in them at each new moon. #FolkloreThursday
The myth of Narcissus tells of a beautiful young man who became so enamored of his own reflection in a river that he refused to move from the spot, and eventually flowers (narcissi) grew there. Echo fell in love with him, but he only had eyes for himself. #FolkloreThursday
JENNY GREENTEETH Beware if passing a marsh or pond in a mist. This sharp-toothed crone pulls unwary wanderers into the depths & devours them. 'Jenny Greenteeth' is also the local name for duckweed in parts of England #FolkloreThursday 🎨image 2 Brian Froud
It was believed that the Taff Whirlpool was frequented by a lovely lady, who lured people whilst bathing 🌪
Youths were known to swim towards her, attracted by her beauty. They were then sucked into the vortex, and their bodies could never be found 💀
#FolkloreThursday #Wales
In old Nordic folk tales (mainly Sweden and Norway) Näcken (the Neck) is a male water creature that mainly lives in rivers, streams, ponds and lakes inland. He plays his fiddle to lure you into the water. #FolkloreThursday
✨A Kelpie is a shape shifting water spirit inhabiting the Locs & Pools of Scottland. Preying on any humans it encounters. It is usually described as a black horselike creature, able to adopt human form. ✨
#folklorethursday
A kyōkotsu is a ghostly, skeletal spirit, with only its bleached skull and tangled hair emerging from its tattered shroud. They are formed from bones improperly disposed of by being discarded down a well, this lack of respect creating a very powerful grudge. #FolkloreThursday