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George Pitt-Lewis, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 28 May 1887
He was an English judge and Liberal and Liberal Unionist politician. His stated recreations included freemasonry and tricycling.
Walter Goodall George, BY Carlo Pellegrini - Vanity Fair, 25 Oct 1884
A British runner who after setting numerous world records as an amateur, went professional in part to challenge the mile record-holder William Cummings, defeating him in several highly publicized races.
Mr CM Palmer, by Carlo Pellegrini - Vanity Fair, 18 October 1884
Charles Mark Palmer was a Liberal Party politician and MP. His father, originally the captain of a whaler, moved in 1828 to Newcastle upon Tyne, where he owned a ship owning and ship-broking business.
Lord AW Hill, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 21 August 1886
Arthur William Hill was an Anglo-Irish soldier and Conservative politician. He served three times as Comptroller of the Household between 1885 and 1898 in the Conservative administrations headed by Lord Salisbury.
Alfred Lyttelton, by Carlo Pellegrini - Vanity Fair, 20 September 1884
He was a British politician and sportsman who excelled at both football and cricket.
Elfie is selling limited Merches in Kizuna Hobby Fair, Kuching! Go grab limited merches mago! (ˊᗜˋ*✿)
#MyVT
To be 100% fair, Envy Adams' hair color varied wildly between printings and her depictions in Scott Pilgrim-associated media (such as video games) and her hair's been everything from blonde to brown to red to reddish pink. Hard to complain about "wrong hair color" with this. 😝 https://t.co/JvBZTBgLPr
Few things are as funny to listen to as game of thrones conspiracy theories
The latest best one is that animorphs are in House of the Dragon
Which, being fair, is a part of the books, but if it is going to be a thing in the show it'll be a little random
“The world is indeed full of peril, and in it there are many dark places; but still there is much that is fair, and though in all lands love is now mingled with grief, it grows perhaps the greater.”
@JRRTolkien
I am now accepting #commissions for “Requiem for a Queen”, PM/email
@TeaTheDemon But to be perfectly fair, I play so many JRPGs that I was gonna get off super easy 😅
@TenbeiHazard @RadiantAeonstar rai's arc happened because of how josuke influenced him. But yeah fair, and it's also kinda stupid how his backstory seems to have been retconned to fit with wonder of u
The Earl of Mount Cashell, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 8 September 1883
Stephen Moore was an Anglo-Irish aristocrat and politician who spent much of his life in what is now Canada.
Earl of Albemarle, by Théobald Chartran - Vanity Fair, 14 July 1883
George Thomas Keppel was a British soldier, Liberal politician and writer. He was succeeded in his titles by his only son William, a great-great-grandfather of Camilla, Queen Consort to King Charles III.
I wish people saw the amount of details I put in my eyes, but to be fair, I put a lot of detail in my art, in general. https://t.co/660B89W8Rm
I'm down the flash game rabbit hole now
HOW IS HAVING TRUNKS HERE FAIR, WHAT SORT OF XENOVERSE NONESENSE WAS OLD DBZ PROMOTION ON
Sir C Lindsay, by Joseph Middleton Jopling - Vanity Fair, 3 February 1883
Coutts Lindsay was a British artist and watercolourist. He and his first wife founded the Grosvenor Gallery in 1877 as an alternative to the Royal Academy.
Mr DL Boucicault, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 16 December 1882
Dionysius Lardner "Dion" Boucicault was an Irish actor and playwright famed for his melodramas
John Henry Puleston, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 14 October 1882
He was a Welsh journalist and entrepreneur in the United States and later a Conservative politician who represented Devonport.