#Byron Walden
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Poems mentioned In dead poets society 🏛️
“She Walks in Beauty” by Lord Byron
“The Ballad of William Bloat” by Raymond Calvert
“The Prophet” by Abraham Cowley
“The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost
“To the Virgins to make much of time” by Robert Herrick
“The Congo” by Vachel Lindsay
“Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day” by William Shakespeare
A Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare
“Ulysses” by Alfred Lord Tennyson
“Walden” by Henry David Thoreau
“O Captain! My Captain!” by Walt Whitman
“O Me! O Life!” by Walt Whitman
“Poetrusic” by Charlie Dalton
(Found most of these online)
#dead poets society#knox overstreet#mr keating#stephen meeks#gerard pitts#neil perry#todd anderson#poetry#charlie dalton
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Literary Canon (from kissgrammar)
The Holy Bible, Authorized King James Version [At a minimum, the books of Genesis, Exodus, Job, Psalms, from the Old Testament; Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and Apocalypse from the New.] Whether or not you are Christian is irrelevant. The civilization in which we live is based on and permeated by the ideas and values expressed in this book. Understanding our civilization, the world in which we live, is probably impossible without having read -- and thought about -- at least the most famous books in the Bible. Historically, the King James Version is considered the most artistic, and thus has probably had the most literary influence.
Homer, The Iliad
Homer, The Odyssey
Sophocles, Oedipus the King (Oedipus Rex)
Sophocles, Antigone
Plato, The Republic, especially "The Myth of the Cave"
Ovid, Metamorphoses
Saint Augustine, The Confessions
Dante, The Divine Comedy
Giovanni Boccaccio, The Decameron
Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince
Giambattista Vico, Principles of a New Science
Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quixote
Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales
Romeo and Juliet
King Lear
Hamlet
Othello
Macbeth
John Donne, "Holy Sonnet XIV"
John Donne, "A Valediction Forbidding Mourning"
Andrew Marvell, "To His Coy Mistress"
John Milton, Paradise Lost
Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels
A Modest Proposal
Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe
Laurence Sterne, The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman
Michel de Montaigne, Essays, especially "Of Experience"
Francois Rabelais, Gargantua and Pantagruel
Moliere, The Misanthrope
Blaise Pascal, Pensees
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Emile
Voltaire, Candide
Erasmus, In Praise of Folly
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Faust, Parts One & Two
Honore de Balzac, Old Goriot (also translated as Pere Goriot)
Stendhal, The Red and the Black
Gustave Flaubert, Madame Bovary
Emile Zola, Germinal
Henrik Ibsen, A Doll's House
William Blake
William Wordsworth
Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice
Lord Byron, Don Juan
John Keats, "Ode on a Grecian Urn"
Robert Browning, "My Last Duchess"
Charles Dickens - Oliver Twist
A Tale Of Two Cities
Hard Times
A Christmas Carol
Matthew Arnold, "Dover Beach"
John Stuart Mill, On Liberty
Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland
Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre
Emily Bronte, Wuthering Heights
Francis Thompson, "The Hound of Heaven"
Samuel Butler, Erewhon
Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray
George Eliot- Silas Marner
Middlemarch
Robert Louis Stevenson, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Friedrich Nietzsche - Beyond Good and Evil
The Will To Power
The Birth of Tragedy
On the Genealogy of Morals
Alexander Pushkin - Eugene Onegin
The Bronze Horseman
Nikolai Gogol -The Overcoat
Dead Souls
Mikhail Lermontov, A Hero of Our Time
Ivan Turgenev, Fathers and Sons
Fyodor Dostoevsky -Notes From the Underground
Crime and Punishment
Leo Tolstoy -The Death of Ivan Ilych
War and Peace
Anton Chekhov, The Cherry Orchard
James Fenimore Cooper, The Deerslayer
Ralph Waldo Emerson, Essays
Emily Dickinson - "Because I Could Not Stop For Death"
"The Tint I Cannot Take"
"There's a Certain Slant of Light"
Walt Whitman - "Song of Myself"
"The Sleepers"
"Crossing Brooklyn Ferry"
"As I Ebbed With The Ocean of Life"
"Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking"
"When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloomd"
Nathaniel Hawthorne - Young Goodman Brown
The Scarlet Letter
Herman Melville, Moby-Dick
Edgar Allen Poe - "The Raven"
The Cask of Amontillado
Henry David Thoreau, Walden
Kate Chopin -The Story of An Hour
The Awakening
Stephen Crane, The Red Badge of Courage
Henry James
Mark Twain, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Luigi Pirandello
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PawPant's Voice Actor
(Rabbidbot "Toyco" White-Rabbit - She cannot talking about not voice anymore but She can Hissing like a Snake)
Rabbidmini - Voice of Amber Hood on Stun Bunny (Nicktoon: Attack of the Toybots)
Attilio Von Chupacabra - Voice of David Kaufman on Danny Fenton (Danny Phantom)
Carly Von Chupacabra - Voice of Katie Crown on Izzy (Total DramaRama)
Donnie Von Chupacabra - Voice of Andy Berman on Dib Membrane (Invader Zim)
Jose Von Chupacabra - Voice of Dan Castellaneta on Grampa Simpson (The Simpsons)
Minnie Monarch-Butterfly - Voice of Tara Strong on Princess Unikitty (Unikitty)
Wallace Yellow-Crested Cockatoo - Voice of Steven Kelly on Byron (Brawl Stars)
Robert Fusibot - Voice of Michaela Dietz on Amethyst (Steven Universe)
Andrea Satyr - Voice of Barbara Dunkelman on Nerris (Camp Camp)
Eva "Ninety-One" Xoloitzcuintli - Voice of Kate Micucci on Dr. Fox (Unikitty)
Mackie Computer - Voice of Carlos Alazraqui on Walden (Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!)
King Balor Boitatá - Voice of Paul Greenberg on Manjimutt (Yo-Kai Watch)
Zella La-Llorona - Voice of Megan Cavanaugh on Nissa (Jimmy Neutron Boy Genius)
Mahavir Great White-Shark - Voice of John Stephen Goodman on Baloo (The Jungle Book 2)
Cosmo Vintage Toy-Robot - Voice of Lindsay Jones on Space Kid (Camp Camp)
Kenia Russian Blue - Voice of Marissa Lenti on Nita (Brawl Stars)
Winona Unicorn - Voice of Kimiko Glenn on Izzy (My Little Pony: A New Generation)
Mr. Dicky Water Python - Voice of Rowan Atkinson on Zazu (The Lion King)
Rasputin "Raz" Mountain Zebra - Voice of Kai Skrotzki on Chester (Brawl Stars)
Izzy Jerboa - Voice of Katie Snyder on Colette (Brawl Stars)
Bella Firefighter - Voice of Cristina Vee Valenzuela on Marinette Dupain-Cheng/Ladybug (Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir)
Opal Petalmen - Voice of Maggie Roswell on Mona Simpson (The Simpsons)
Monday Poodle - Voice of Nicki Rapp on Lili Zanotto (Psychonants 2)
Eis "Eastern" Traffic Light - Voice of Howard Ryshpan on Geppetto (Pinocchio 3000)
Winter Polar Bear - Voice of Rachael MacFarlane on Hayley Smith (American Dad!)
Modem Sliverback Gorilla - Voice of Scott McCord on Owen (Total Drama)
Edward Pixie - Voice of Audrey Wasilewski on Tuck (My Life as a Teenage Robot)
Valentina Bilby - Voice of Wendy Schaal on Francine Smith (American Dad!)
Peter Pileated Woodpecker - Voice of Sonja Ball on Pinocchio (Pinocchio 3000)
Dexter Harpie - Voice of Jill Talley on I.Q. (Wacky Races 2017)
Cayden Jack In The Box - Voice of James Arnold Taylor on Wooldoor Jebediah Sockbat (Drawn Together)
Gravestone Black Flying Fox - Voice of Ed Mace on Mortis (Brawl Stars)
Blu Milk Snake - Voice of Kat Cressida on Dee Dee (Dexter's Laboratory)
Shay Ghoul - Voice of Steve Carell on Hammy (Over the Hedge)
Gina Green-Boost - Voice of Elsie Lovelock on Uzi (Murder Drones)
Stitches - Voice of Zane VanWicklin on Arnold Shortman (Hey Arnold!)
Corbin Black Panther - Voice of Jason Lee on Bones (Monster House)
Valentina Bilby - Voice of Wendy Schaal on Francine Smith (American Dad!)
Snow-White Polish Rabbit - Voice of Bella Ramsey on Hilda (Hilda the Series)
Hurricane Kirin -
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MORTIMER ADLER’S READING LIST (PART 2)
Reading list from “How To Read a Book” by Mortimer Adler (1972 edition).
Alexander Pope: Essay on Criticism; Rape of the Lock; Essay on Man
Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu: Persian Letters; Spirit of Laws
Voltaire: Letters on the English; Candide; Philosophical Dictionary
Henry Fielding: Joseph Andrews; Tom Jones
Samuel Johnson: The Vanity of Human Wishes; Dictionary; Rasselas; The Lives of the Poets
David Hume: Treatise on Human Nature; Essays Moral and Political; An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
Jean-Jacques Rousseau: On the Origin of Inequality; On the Political Economy; Emile, The Social Contract
Laurence Sterne: Tristram Shandy; A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy
Adam Smith: The Theory of Moral Sentiments; The Wealth of Nations
Immanuel Kant: Critique of Pure Reason; Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals; Critique of Practical Reason; The Science of Right; Critique of Judgment; Perpetual Peace
Edward Gibbon: The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire; Autobiography
James Boswell: Journal; Life of Samuel Johnson, Ll.D.
Antoine Laurent Lavoisier: Traité Élémentaire de Chimie (Elements of Chemistry)
Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison: Federalist Papers
Jeremy Bentham: Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation; Theory of Fictions
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Faust; Poetry and Truth
Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier: Analytical Theory of Heat
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: Phenomenology of Spirit; Philosophy of Right; Lectures on the Philosophy of History
William Wordsworth: Poems
Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Poems; Biographia Literaria
Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice; Emma
Carl von Clausewitz: On War
Stendhal: The Red and the Black; The Charterhouse of Parma; On Love
Lord Byron: Don Juan
Arthur Schopenhauer: Studies in Pessimism
Michael Faraday: Chemical History of a Candle; Experimental Researches in Electricity
Charles Lyell: Principles of Geology
Auguste Comte: The Positive Philosophy
Honore de Balzac: Père Goriot; Eugenie Grandet
Ralph Waldo Emerson: Representative Men; Essays; Journal
Nathaniel Hawthorne: The Scarlet Letter
Alexis de Tocqueville: Democracy in America
John Stuart Mill: A System of Logic; On Liberty; Representative Government; Utilitarianism; The Subjection of Women; Autobiography
Charles Darwin: The Origin of Species; The Descent of Man; Autobiography
Charles Dickens: Pickwick Papers; David Copperfield; Hard Times
Claude Bernard: Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine
Henry David Thoreau: Civil Disobedience; Walden
Karl Marx: Capital; Communist Manifesto
George Eliot: Adam Bede; Middlemarch
Herman Melville: Moby-Dick; Billy Budd
Fyodor Dostoevsky: Crime and Punishment; The Idiot; The Brothers Karamazov
Gustave Flaubert: Madame Bovary; Three Stories
Henrik Ibsen: Plays
Leo Tolstoy: War and Peace; Anna Karenina; What is Art?; Twenty-Three Tales
Mark Twain: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn; The Mysterious Stranger
William James: The Principles of Psychology; The Varieties of Religious Experience; Pragmatism; Essays in Radical Empiricism
Henry James: The American; ‘The Ambassadors
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche: Thus Spoke Zarathustra; Beyond Good and Evil; The Genealogy of Morals; The Will to Power
Jules Henri Poincare: Science and Hypothesis; Science and Method
Sigmund Freud: The Interpretation of Dreams; Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis; Civilization and Its Discontents; New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis
George Bernard Shaw: Plays and Prefaces
Max Planck: Origin and Development of the Quantum Theory; Where Is Science Going?; Scientific Autobiography
Henri Bergson: Time and Free Will; Matter and Memory; Creative Evolution; The Two Sources of Morality and Religion
John Dewey: How We Think; Democracy and Education; Experience and Nature; Logic; the Theory of Inquiry
Alfred North Whitehead: An Introduction to Mathematics; Science and the Modern World; The Aims of Education and Other Essays; Adventures of Ideas
George Santayana: The Life of Reason; Skepticism and Animal Faith; Persons and Places
Lenin: The State and Revolution
Marcel Proust: Remembrance of Things Past
Bertrand Russell: The Problems of Philosophy; The Analysis of Mind; An Inquiry into Meaning and Truth; Human Knowledge, Its Scope and Limits
Thomas Mann: The Magic Mountain; Joseph and His Brothers
Albert Einstein: The Meaning of Relativity; On the Method of Theoretical Physics; The Evolution of Physics
James Joyce: ‘The Dead’ in Dubliners; A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man; Ulysses
Jacques Maritain: Art and Scholasticism; The Degrees of Knowledge; The Rights of Man and Natural Law; True Humanism
Franz Kafka: The Trial; The Castle
Arnold J. Toynbee: A Study of History; Civilization on Trial
Jean Paul Sartre: Nausea; No Exit; Being and Nothingness
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: The First Circle; The Cancer Ward
Source: mortimer-adlers-reading-list
#reading list#long post#mortimer adler#text#saved posts#works#books#so much to read#philosophy#literature#dark academia#light academia
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What was read 2023
The Lottery & Other Stories - Shirley Jackson (1949~)
A Life Standing Up - Steve Martin (2007)
Blood Meridian - Cormac McCarthy (1985)
Licks of Love -John Updike (2000)
Lovesickness Collection - Junji Ito (2011)
Flowers for Algernon - Daniel Keyes (1966)
The Anarchy The relentless rise of the East India Company - William Dalrymple (2019)
The Wisdom of Insecurity - Alan W.Watts (1951)
War and Peace - Leo Tolstoy (1869)
The Course of Love - Alain de Botton (2016)
Tender is the Night - F Scott Fitzgerald (1934)
Housekeeping - Marilynne Robinson (1980)
Moby Dick - Herman Melville (1851)
A Faint Heart (1848)White Nights (1848) A Little Hero (1857)An Unpleasant Predicament (1862) The Crocodile (1865) Bobok (1873) A Gentle Spirit/The Meek One* (1876) T1877) Fyodor Dostoevsky
The Maltese Falcon - Dashiell Hammett (1929)
Haunted - Chuck Palahniuk (2005)
The Name of the Rose - Umberto Eco (1980/3)
Diary - Chuck Palahniuk (2003)
Darkness Visible - William Styron (1990)
The Poorhouse Fair - John Updike (1958)
The Sound and the Fury - William Faulkner (1929)
The First Forty-Nine Stories - Ernest Hemingway (1939)
Mythos - Stephen Fry (2017)
The Good Earth - Pearl S. Buck (1931)
The Road to Wigan Pier - George Orwell (1936)
The House of the Dead - Fyodor Dostoevsky (1861)
Walden - Henry David Thoreau (1854)
The Gambler - Fyodor Dostoevsky (1866)
Normal People - Sally Rooney (2018)
Joy in the Morning - P. G. Wodehouse (1947)
After Dark - Haruki Murakami (2004)
The Lodger - Marie Belloc Lowndes (1913)
The Thing Around Your Neck - Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (2009)
The Right Stuff - Tom Wolfe (1979)
Family Happiness - Leo Tolstoy (1859)
The Death of Ivan Ilyich - Leo Tolstoy (1866)
The Kreutzer Sonata - Leo Tolstoy (1889)
The Devil - Leo Tolstoy (1911)
Nausea - Jean-Paul Sartre (1938)
True History of the Kelly Gang - Peter Carey (2000)
Foucault’s Pendulum - Umberto Eco (1988/9)
Inferno - Dante Alighieri (~1308-1321)
Iliad - Homer (Samuel Butler translation 1898)
Carry On, Jeeves - P.G. Wodehouse (1925)
The Passenger - Cormac McCarthy (2022)
Stella Maris - Cormac McCarthy (2022)
Fear: Trump in the White House - Bob Woodward (2018)
Rubber Balls and Liquor - Gilbert Gottfried (2011)
kiss me like a stranger* - Gene Wilder (2005)
The Adventures of Auguie March - Saul Bellow (1953)
Rickles’ Book A memoir - Don Rickles (2007)
The ‘Rosy Crucifixion’ Trilogy. Sexus - Henry Miller (1949)
The Heart of a Dog - Milhaud Bulgakov (1925)
Dracula - Bram Stoker (1897)
The Grapes of Wrath - John Steinbeck (1939)
Albert & the Whale - Philip Hoare (2021)
A Waiter in Paris - Edward Chisholm (2022)
The Road to Oxiana - Robert Byron (1937)
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Antonio Velardo shares: What Barflies Hit by Caitlin Lovinger
By Caitlin Lovinger Byron Walden’s theme makes a big deal out of nothing. Published: October 13, 2023 at 10:00PM from NYT Gameplay https://ift.tt/ZP8Lk0i via IFTTT
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Crossword Tournament From Your Couch Recap!
In today's blog post, we recap last week's marvelous Crossword Tournament From Your Couch! #couchword
This past weekend was supposed to be the 43rd year of the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament, but that event was postponed due to the ongoing public health crisis.
But something amazing arose from the ashes of those plans. A small, intrepid group of puzzlers worked night and day for more than a week, bringing an at-home crossword tournament to life: Crossword Tournament From Your Couch. (AKA #…
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#ACPT#American Crossword Puzzle Tournament#Brian Cimmet#Byron Walden#chesterfield#constructing#construction#constructor#couch#couchword#crossword#crossword tournament#crossword tournament from your couch#ctfc#ctfyc#Dan Feyer#David Plotkin#Ellen Ripstein#Erik Agard#finn vigeland#fleabag#futon#hepplewhite#inkubator#jesse lansner#Joel Fagliano#kevin der#kevin g. der#laura braunstein#Lollapuzzoola
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On Wednesdays, We Read Pink. :)
Following the book cover one color per day posts.
#pink books#wednesday#books#laura dean keeps breaking up with me#the make believe husband#my lady jane#difficult women#the luxe#annie on my mind#red white and royal blue#on the way to the wedding#mad & bad the real heroines of the regency#the jane austen book club#princess jellyfish#unmentionable#walden#lord byron's poetry#my lesbian experience with loneliness#mychatter#I'm bi which probably explains the mix of LGBT and straight romance#I've read 8 out of the 15 books here#owned tbr
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any book recs for the covid quarantine ?? help I haven’t left the house since Friday
I'm going to skip over the obvious DA novels (like TSH, The Picture of Dorian Gray, If We Were Villains, etc), but here are my personal recs!!
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey
Papillon by Henri Charrière
The Woman in Black by Susan Hill
Into the Wild (My favourite book, the film is worth a watch as well^^) by Jon Krakauer
Walden by Henry David Thoreau
Obligated to recommend the stereotypical school books so
Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger (A lot of people said they had to read it in school but I wasn't lucky enough for that I guess)
The Outsiders by SE Hinton
Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien (I had to read this is a class amd it was so unbelievably good)
Those are a few of my favourites that are pretty easy to get lost in. If you want any more don't hesitate to ask!!
#ask#blueleys#the picture of dorian gray#architecture#tsh#tp#books and libraries#studyblr#dark acadamia aesthetic#dark academia outfit#dark academia#one flew over the cuckoos nest#papillon#the woman in black#if we were villains#the secret history#into the wild#walden#henry david thoreau#lord byron#catcher in the rye#the outsiders#kite runner#the things they carried#book rec#coronavirus#covid 19#covid19#covidー19
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Masculine Names
Aaron Abdul Abe Abel Abraham Abram Ace Achilles Adair Adam Adonis Adrian Adriel Ahmed Ajax Ajay Aiden Alan Albert Alejandro Alex Alexander Alfonso Alfred Alistair Alister Allen Alonzo Amadeo Amadeus Amani Amari Ambrose Amir Anders Anderson Andre Andreas Andrew Andy Angel Angelo Angus Ansel Anson Anthony Antonio Apollo Aries Archer Archie Aristotle Arlo Arnaldo Arnold Arsenio Arthur Arturo Arwin Asa Asher Aslan Atlas Atticus Aubrey August Augustin Augustine Augustus Aurelio Aurelius Austin Axel Aziz
Balthazar Bane Barnabas Barnaby Barney Baron Barrett Basil Bastian Bear Beau Beck Ben Benjamin Benji Bentley Bernard Bertram Bertrand Blake Blaze Blue Bobby Bodhi Booker Boris Boston Bowie Boyd Brad Bradford Bradley Bram Bramwell Bran Brandon Brandt Braxton Braylen Brayden Brendon Brent Brett Brian Briar Brick Bridge Bridger Brock Brody Brogan Bronx Brook Brooks Bruce Bruno Brutus Bryce Bryson Buck Bud Buddha Buddy Buck Burt Burton Buster Buzz Byron
Cade Caden Cain Cairo Caius Calder Caleb Callum Calvin Cam Cameron Camillo Campbell Carl Carlisle Carlito Carlo Carlos Carlton Carmine Carson Carter Casper Caspian Cassian Cassias Cato Cecil Cedar Cedric Cesar Chad Chadwick Chance Charles Charlton Chase Chauncey Chester Chidi Chip Christoff Christoph Christopher Christian Chuck Cian Cillian Clarence Clark Claud Clay Clayton Cliff Clifford Clint Clinton Clyde Coby Cody Colby Cole Collin Colt Colton Conan Connor Conrad Constantine Cooper Copper Corbin Cornelius Cory Cosmo Cosmos Costas Craig Crispin Cruz Curt Curtis Cyrus
Dale Dallas Dalton Damien Damon Dan Dane Daniel Dante Darius Darrel Darren Dash Dashiell Davey David Dawson Dax Daxton Deacon Dean DeAndre Declan Demetrius Denali Dennis Denny Denzel Derek Derrick Des Desmond Dewey Dex Dexter Diego Diesel Dion Dirk Dixon Dmitri Dominic Donatello Donovan Dorian Doug Douglas Draco Drew Duke Duncan Dustin Dusty Dwayne Dwight Dylan Dyson
Earl Easton Edgar Edmund Eduardo Edward Edwin Egon Eli Elijah Elias Elliott Ellis Elroy Elton Emanuel Emeric Emerson Emery Emil Emiliano Emmett Emrys Enrique Enzo Eric Ernest Ernesto Ernie Esteban Ethan Eugene Eustace Euvan Evan Evander Everett Ezekiel Ezra
Fabian Fabio Falcon Faustus Felix Ferdinand Fergus Ferguson Fernando Fidel Fido Finbar Findlay Finn Finnley Fionn Fisher Fitz Fletcher Flint Florence Florian Ford Forrest Fort Foster Fowler Fox Francesco Francis Francisco Franco Frank Frankie Franklin Fred Freddy Fredrick Frederico
Gabe Gabriel Gael Gage Gale Galen Garfield Garrett Gaston Gatsby Gavin Geoffrey Geordie George Gerald Gerard Gideon Gil Gilbert Gilberto Giovanni Glenn Gordon Gordy Grady Graham Grant Gray Grayson Gregg Gregory Grey Griffin Griffith Grover Gunner Gunther Gus Gustavo Guy
Hades Hal Hamilton Hank Hans Harley Harrison Harry Hawk Hayden Hayes Heath Hector Henrik Hendrix Henry Herb Herbert Herbie Hercules Hermes Hershel Hiram Holden Howard Howie Hudson Hugo Humphrey Hunter Hux Huxley
Ian Igor Iker Irvin Isaac Isaiah Ivan
Jace Jack Jackson Jacob Jaques Jaden Jake Jalen Jamal James Jameson Jared Jason Jax Jay Jed Jedidiah Jefferson Jeffrey Jeremiah Jeremy Jerome Jerry Jesus Jethro Jett Jim Jimmy Joe Joel Johan Johannes John Johnny Jonah Jonas Jonathan Jones Jordan Jose Joseph Joshua Josiah Juan Juanito Judah Judas Judd Jude Jules Julian Julien Julio Julius Junior Jupiter Jurgen Justice Justin Justus
Kaden Kai Kaiser Kale Kaleb Kane Keane Keanu Keaton Keegan Keenan Keith Kellen Kenan Kendrick Kenneth Kenzo Keoni Kevin Khalid Kian Kieran Kiernan Kingsley Kingston Killian Kip Kwan Kyle
Lachlan Lake Lamar Lance Lancelot Landon Lane Larkin Larry Lars Laurence Laurent Lawrence Lawson Lazlo Legend Leif Leith Leland Leo Leon Leonardo Leopold Leroy Levi Liam Lincoln Linden Logan Loki London Lonnie Lonny Lorcan Lorenzo Lou Louie Louis Luc Luca Lucas Lucian Lucky Luke Lupe Luther
Maddox Maksim Malachi Malachy Malakai Malcolm Malik Manfred Manny Marcel Marcello Marcellus Marcio Marcius Marco Marcos Marcus Marian Marino Mario Marius Mark Marlin Marlon Marmaduke Marques Mars Marshall Martin Marty Marvel Marvin Massimo Mason Matt Matteo Matthew Maurice Maverick Max Maximilian Maximus Maxwell Melvin Mercury Meredith Merritt Micah Michael Miguel Miles Milo Mitchell Moe Monte Montgomery Murdoch Murphy Murray Murtagh Murtaugh Myles
Nathan Nathaniel Ned Nelson Nemo Neo Neon Neptune Neville Newt Newton Nick Nicky Nicola Nicolai Nicholas Niko Noah Noel Nolan Norm Norman Novak
Obadiah Octavio Octavius Odin Olaf Oleg Oliver Olivier Omar Orion Orlando Orville Osborn Oscar Oso Osvaldo Oswald Ottis Otto Owen Oz Ozzy
Pablo Palmer Panther Parker Pascal Patrick Paul Paxton Pedro Penn Percival Percy Perseus Peter Peyton Phil Philip Phineas Phoenix Pier Pierce Pierre Pilot Pluto Porter Poseidon Preston Prince Prosper
Qadir Quincy Quinn Quinton
Raiden Ralph Ramone Ramses Randall Randolph Randy Raphael Ravi Ray Raymond Red Reece Reggie Reginald Regis Reid Remington Reuben Rex Reynald Reynaldo Reynard Rhett Rhys Ricardo Richard Richie Richmond Rick Ricky Rico Ridge Riley Rio Riordan River Robert Roberto Robbie Rocco Rocky Rodney Rodrigo Roger Ricky Riley Rod Rodrick Roger Roland Roman Romeo Ross Rowan Rudy Rufus Russell Ryder Ryker Rylan Ryland
Salem Salvador Salvator Sam Samir Sampson Samson Samuel Sander Sandford Sanjay Santiago Saul Sawyer Scott Sean Sebastian Septimus Serge Sergio Seth Seus Seymour Shane Shawn Shayne Sheldon Shepherd Sherlock Sherman Shin Sidney Sigmund Silas Silver Silvester Simon Sinclair Sinjin Sirius Slade Slate Sol Solomon Sonny Sparrow Spartacus Spencer Spike Soren Stan Stanford Stanley Steele Stephen Steven Stevie Stone Sven Summit Sullivan Sully Sylvester
Tad Tag Talon Tanner Tate Ted Teddy Teo Teodor Teodoro Terence Terrell Terry Tex Thad Thaddeus Thane Thatcher Theo Theoden Theodore Thomas Thor Thorn Tiberius Tiger Tito Titus Timothy Titus Tobias Toby Tommy Tony Topher Trace Travis Trent Trenton Trev Trevor Trey Tristan Troy Truman Tucker Tudor Tullio Tullius Tully Tycho Tyler Tyrell Tyrese Tyrone Tyson
Uberto Ulric Ulrich Ulysses Uriah Urban Urijah Uriel
Van Vance Vaugn Victor Vince Vincenco Vincent Vinny Virgil Vlad Vladimir
Wade Walden Waldo Walker Wallace Wally Walt Walter Warner Warren Watson Waylon Wayne Wendall Wesley Westley Weston Wilbert Wilbur Wilder Wiley Wilfred Will William Winston Wolf Wolfe Wolfgang Woodrow Wyatt
Xander Xavier Xavion Xenon
Yael Yahir York Yosef Yousef Yusef
Zac Zach Zachariah Zacharias Zachary Zack Zander Zane Zayden Zeke Zeus Ziggy Zion Zoltan
#masculine names#trans masculine#masculine#trans#trans names#transgender#baby names#names#boy names#trans boy#trans man#trans guy#dog names#name asks#name change#name stuff#name suggestions#name struggles#name advice#name choosing#name help#name inspiration#name ideas#name list#name problems#pet names#cat names
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LA CAÍDA DE LORD VOLDEMORT.
→ parte IV: el final de edgar bones.
IMPORTANTE: Algunas partes han sido editadas dada la fecha actual del roleplay. Continuación de este thread.
Con participaciones de Lucius Malfoy, Alec Selwyn, Byron Gibbon, Corban Yaxley ]( @corbvnyaxley ), Alecto Carrow ( @carrowxalecto ), Everett Wilkes, Rodolphus Lestrange, Walden MacNair, Cassia Clearwater ( @littlercdbird ), Jason Denbright ( @denbrightjay ), Natasha Selwyn ( @natvsha ), Minerva MacMillan ( @imperfectmacmillan ), Amelia Bones ( @bonesmelia ), Katherine Ollivander ( @kathollivander ), Mary MacDonald ( @macdxnaldmary ), Sturgis Podmore, Alice Longbottom ( @she-is-alice-watson ), Lily Potter y Remus Lupin ( @remuslvpiin ).
—
narrado por moony.
Debía encontrar a su señor.
Debía correr. No, debía volar. Debía aparecerse lo más pronto posible antes de que su jugada resultara inútil.
Dejando atrás el cuerpo inconsciente de Edgar Bones, Jugson se abría paso entre los muggles. Seres inmundos; de no ser porque no era práctico, habría quitado a cada uno de su camino con un simple maleficio. Nadie encontraría a Bones en aquel callejón, seguramente aquel imbécil tendría que encargarse de sí mismo.
Ninguno de sus tontos amigos de la Orden del Fénix vendría a rescatarlo.
Vaya nombre ridículo. No era de extrañarse que un tonto como Albus Dumbledore fuera su líder.
Pero si a algo temía su señor era a aquel sujeto, sabía bien que no se atrevería a desafiarlo, y por ende ninguno de ellos tampoco... Eso no evitaba que eliminara uno a uno al montón de bastardos que lo seguían ciegamente. Inmensa tontería la de creer a Dumbledore el mago más poderoso de la actualidad, cuando su Señor lo superaba con creces. Lord Voldemort era superior a cualquier mago pasado y a cualquiera presente.
En un latido se desapareció detrás de una residencia muggle para entonces arribar en seguida a un lugar aparentemente abandonado. Caminó entre el abundante pasto del campo, dirigiéndose a una casona a unos metros. Un movimiento de varita bastó para tirar las defensas del lugar, las cuales volvió a aplicar instantáneamente. Progresó y se internó en el lugar, que si bien por fuera parecía destruido, por dentro se trataba de una lujosa casa.
Jugson era capaz de escuchar voces en la planta alta. Subió por las escaleras mientras música clásica sonaba en otro sitio. A pasos agigantados tocó la puerta de una habitación. La misma se abrió lentamente, revelando la figura de Lord Voldemort sentado en una elegante silla oscura. A su lado se encontraba Malfoy, uno de sus más leales (e ineptos) seguidores.
"Mi señor" Jugson se introdujo con una reverencia rápida a la par que ingresaba al cuarto.
"Jugson" el nombre se deslizó por los labios de Voldemort al igual que la serpiente que le recorría el cuello. "¿Qué tienes para mí?"
El mortifago aclaró su garganta y lanzó una rápida mirada a Malfoy, su presencia no le encantaba, preferiría hablar a solas con su señor; desgraciadamente no veía más remedio que acceder a la compañía del rubio.
Acto seguido, Jugson comenzó a relatar cada detalle posible. La forma en que se había topado a Edgar Bones transfigurado en uno de los Flint, husmeando en un mercado al cual pocos tenían acceso. Cómo sus dudas lo llevaron a la verdad, arrastrando a tan despreciable ser lejos de ahí, donde se aseguró de asestarle un par de golpes que lo dejaron en desventaja. El veritaserum que habían robado hace unas semanas del Ministerio de Magia le resultó de ayuda en esos instantes. Era sólo un poco, pero cumplió con el fin.
Le reveló sobre la Orden del Fénix, el estúpido y risible nombre que Albus Dumbledore usaba para sus seguidores. Que Edgar Bones era parte del grupo y que Alastor Moody también estaba involucrado, y que si bien una persona terminó por cruzar cerca de ahí y no pudo concluir su interrogatorio como era debido, sabía que Andromeda Black (ahora portadora de su asqueroso apellido de traidora) les era de ayuda (desconocía la forma, claro).
Su semblante se fijó momentáneamente en Malfoy, buscando algún rastro de emoción respecto a la mención de la hermana de su esposa. Creyó ver nervios en las lineas de su rostro, pero nada realmente perceptible.
"Orden del Fénix" aquel petulante nombre surgió de los labios de Voldemort, un tinte de gracia en su tono. "Un nombre tan… Peculiar" pausó. "Tan propio de Albus Dumbledore."
Se alzó de la silla, provocando que Malfoy y Jugson retrocedieran un paso para darle espacio. Fue silencio el que inundó la habitación un rato, y pasos cuidadosos los que dio su señor mientras cruzaba el lugar.
"Nos encargaremos de Bones" anunció. "En cuanto a Andromeda… Estoy segura de que Bellatrix estará encantada de cruzar un par de palabras con su hermana" los dedos de Voldemort se deslizaron por su varita, un gesto altivo en su rostro. "Jugson… Vigila a Bones. Llévate a algunos dentro de unos días y termina con todo esto. Tengo algo de qué encargarme." Le indicó. Jugson asintió una sola vez.
"Sí, señor."
"Mi señor, ¿qué hará con Alastor Moody?" Preguntó Malfoy en seguida. Dado su cargo en el Ministerio, seguramente le importaría que pasaría con el Jefe de los aurores.
"Me encargaré de… Brindarle un mensaje claro" una tenue pero formal sonrisa surcó los labios del Señor Tenebroso al darse media vuelta. Jugson juró que pudo sentir a Malfoy estremecerse. "Y Jugson…" El aludido alzó la cabeza, encontrándose con los ojos del mago. "Bien hecho."
Jugson se limitó a asentir nuevamente, para después dar breve vistazo a Malfoy y a su señor, listo para retirarse. Tras su despedida, salió por la puerta, escuchando por detrás a Voldemort ordenando que Malfoy debía convocar a una reunión inmediata.
—
narrado por dannie ( @goldensmileboy )
Los eventos ocurridos con Jugson habían robado toda la tranquilidad de su mente, especialmente porque había quedado al descubierto, al igual que unos cuantos antiguos miembros de la Orden. El sueño había dejado de ser algo de lo que Bones disfrutaba y aquello era algo que su esposa notó a los pocos días.
"Ed, ¿pasa algo?" preocupación era notable en las palabras que pronunciaba la antigua Slytherin, mientras tomaba asiento frente al rubio en el estudio de la casa que compartían; y aunque Edgar quería compartir sus preocupaciones con su esposa, no podía hacerlo sin exponerla a un peligro mayor al que ya corría con el de haberse casado con él.
"No es nada, sólo estoy un poco estresado y preocupado con los últimos partidos" le dolía mentirle de aquella manera pero era lo mejor, o al menos eso pensaba el mayor. Aquellas palabras al menos habían parecido haber convencido a Cora, pues solo había comentado que seguro todo iría bien y que no se tardara en ir a la cama, antes de dejarlo solo.
Las horas pasaban mientras la preocupación de Bones crecía. Sabía que era sólo cuestión de tiempo para que los mortifagos vinieran por él, y su único deseo era salvar a su familia. Debía de haber una forma de hacerlo, pues el exponerlos aún más a ese peligro no era una opción. Si iba a morir planeaba hacerlo solo. Sus hijos, su esposa y su hermana no se verían arrastrados a aquel desastre con él.
El tiempo transcurrido desde que su esposa se había retirado a la habitación que compartían, dejó de tener importancia en la mente de Edgar, pues solo quería encontrar una solución y pronto. Una antigua foto familiar captó su atención y aquella parecía ser la señal que necesitaba, pues en aquella foto estaban Amelia, Michael, Elise, y Grace junto a sus padres, sus tíos y sus abuelos, todos sonriendo. No habían sido manchados por la pérdida y el dolor de la guerra, aquello había sido muchos años atrás frente a la casa de campo de sus abuelos, una residencia que solían visitar antes con mucha frecuencia. La revelación se sintió como si le quitaran un peso del cuerpo, pues podría poner de excusa algo tan sencillo como el clima o algo como la celebración de la Pascua para convencer a Cora de llevar a sus hijos a pasar unos días en aquella casa, y claramente también a Amelia. Rápidamente el chico fue al encuentro de su esposa, no pudiendo evitar sonreír al ver que aun estaba despierta.
“¿Sabes? Estaba pensando que un cambio de aires le haría muy bien a ti y a los niños” expresó tranquilo, logrando que sus palabras iluminaran el rostro de su esposa. Pronto explicó su idea, y claramente le comunicó que él no tardaría en alcanzarlos en cuanto tuviera su último entrenamiento con el equipo en un par de días, mientras que su esposa, sus hijos, y con suerte su hermana, partirían al día siguiente, ya que al menos por esos momentos la menor de los Bones no se encontraba en casa y no podían comentarle el plan.
Una vez que había resuelto su mayor preocupación, Edgar había logrado conciliar el sueño, pues en verdad creía que al menos lograría salvar a su familia de aquel fatal destino que a él le esperaba, pero cuando apenas habían pasado unas tres horas que el mayor se encontró en los brazos de Morfeo, un estallido lo despertó y todos sus sentidos de alarma se activaron.
“Cora, toma a los niños y vete” le espetó a su esposa mientras tomaba su varita, pues aquel estallido solo podría haber sido causado por un grupo de personas.
“¿Ed, qué está pasando?” La voz de la chica llena de preocupación logró romper a Edgar, y aunque quería abrazarla y decirle que todo estaría bien, no era el momento, necesitaba salvarla.
"No puedo explicarlo. Sólo toma a los niños y vete, por favor” sus palabras eran una súplica, y a la vez una orden, y aunque sabía que era muy probable que no volviera a ver a su esposa ni a sus hijos, se dirigió escaleras abajo para enfrentarse a aquellos que habían entrado en su casa.
El desastre que habían dejado en la planta baja era evidente, y pronto escuchó sus voces.
“¿Dónde está ese traidor?” la sangre de Edgar se heló al escuchar una profunda voz.
“Debe estar aquí. Cómo dije conseguí bastantes pruebas de que es uno de ellos, ahora sólo tenemos que encargarnos de esto” aquella era la voz de Jugson. Edgar sólo quería ganar tiempo para que Cora pudiera huir con sus hijos, y sólo rogaba porque Amelia no hubiera llegado aún a casa. Tras tomar un poco de aire, entró al salón para enfrentarse a aquellos seres que tanto detestaba.
“No les será tan fácil librarse de mí” expreso con seguridad a la par que lanzaba un Expelliarmus, el cual desencadenó una pelea con los dos mortifagos.
“Miren a quienes me encontré tratando de huir: A nuestra traidora gorda favorita y sus crías” aquella voz llena de veneno era una que Edgar conocía muy bien, y que usara aquellos adjetivos para referirse a su esposa sólo aumentaron la ira en su interior, pero pronto la ira se vio sustituida por la preocupación cuando en su campo de visión estuvo la figura enmascarada de quien debía ser Alecto Carrow, tomando a Cora por el cabello mientras ella cargaba a sus hijos.
“Déjenlos ir, ellos no tienen nada que ver en esto” espetó, no dejando que se viera el nerviosismo en su voz, pero sólo obtuvo una risa como contestación por parte de Carrow y Jugson.
“¿Y dejar que esta traidora se salga con la suya? Nunca. Tú y tu familia van a pagar por todo lo que tu grupito ha hecho, ya es hora de que aprendan que con nosotros y nuestro señor no pueden estar jugando, y que no pueden ganarnos” nuevamente la primera voz habló, y no tardó en lanzarle un hechizo inmovilizador.
“¿Siempre tienen que ser tan dramáticos? ¿No podemos sólo matarlos y ya?” aquella nueva voz venía de su cocina, y pronto una cuarta figura encapuchada apareció.
“¿Cuándo aprenderás que tenemos que darles su merecido? Si no, nunca van a aprender nada. Ahora, si tanta prisa tienes, ¿por qué no empiezas con la traidora de Bullstrode? Apuesto a que chillará como cerdito cuando la tortures. Yo me aseguraré que este idiota admire todo” nuevamente habló la primera voz, pero ahora se había vuelto a acercar para sostener el rostro de Edgar y así lo mantuviera fijo en donde ahora se encontraba su esposa. Los gritos no se hicieron esperar, y la impotencia inundo el cuerpo de Bones por no poder hacer nada, además de la culpa, pues si tan sólo hubiera actuado antes, esto no le estaría pasando a ella; no tendría que soportar esto, sólo tendría que haber lidiado con su muerte. Pero no había sido lo suficientemente rápido o cuidadoso para ahorrarle ese dolor, y todo ese sufrimiento, y lo lamentaba más que nada. Su único consuelo es que no le habían hecho lo mismo a sus hijos, pero sabía que no tendrían mejor suerte que ellos.
“Quítate, Gibbon, claramente eres demasiado inepto para esto. Mejor tú y Jugson encárguense de los mocosos antes de que empiecen a llorar” expresó Carrow, dándole un empujón a su compañero. El terror se vio reflejado en los ojos de Edgar pues, aunque nunca había sido torturado por ella y su hermano personalmente, su fama los precedía y no sabía cuánto podría aguantar Cora aquello. Pero antes de que los gritos volvieran a escucharse dos destellos verdes llenaron la habitación, los cuales habían acabado con las vidas de Josh y Amelia Jr. Aquello rompió un poco más a Edgar, llenando sus mejillas de lágrimas, y arrancó un grito desolado de la garganta de Cora, y sin duda aquello fue lo peor para Edgar, pero seguía sin poder hacer o decir nada gracias al hechizo.
Al grito de la pérdida de madre, lo siguieron los gritos por la tortura que implementó Alecto sobre Cora, que para su mala suerte no solo fue mágica, si no física y Edgar se vio obligado a presenciar todo aquello.
Había pasado más de una hora de que su tortura empezó cuando el cuerpo ya sin energías de su esposa terminó en el suelo, aun mirando a Edgar, quien sólo podía decirle con la mirada que lo sentía, que ella merecía algo mejor que todo eso, y que la amaba.
“Bueno, ya te divertiste Carrow, y dudo que esa traidora sirva de más, así que solo mátala” la orden vino de Jugson y tras bufido producido por la bruja, un nuevo destello verde llenó la habitación acabando con la vida de Cora Bones, y haciendo que las mejillas de Edgar se llenaran nuevamente de lágrimas, mientras su alma y su corazón se rompían un poco más.
“No creas que nos hemos olvidado de ti, traidor asqueroso que quiere hacerse el héroe, esto es solo el comienzo para ti” expresó Alecto casi riendo, y entonces los cuatro mortifagos empezaron a torturarlo, pues en sus mentes querían hacerle pagar por todo lo que la Orden estaba haciendo, y por las traiciones a la sangre que él y su familia habían cometido. Sobre todo porque querían enviar un mensaje que su señor les había dejado, el mensaje de que el seguir luchando contra ellos era inútil y que no iban a ganar aquella guerra, y sobre todo el mensaje de que sabían quiénes eran.
El tiempo nuevamente se volvió irrelevante para Edgar, su cuerpo ya se encontraba sin fuerzas cuando sus enemigos se aburrieron de torturarlo, y entonces un último resplandor verde apareció en la casa Bones, y entonces el corazón de Edgar Bones dio su último latido. Un buen hombre fue a la guerra y los demonios corrieron, la noche cayó y ahogó al sol. La amistad murió y el amor mintió. La noche cayó y la oscuridad se alzó, el chico perdió, los demonios ganaron y aquella sonrisa dorada que siempre adornó su rostro, ahora era solo un recuerdo, pues se había apagado para siempre.
—
narrado por moony.
Abandonaron la casa en un destello, apareciéndose con los cuerpos de sus víctimas en una locación desconocida. Un par de capuchas surgieron entre las sombras.
"¿Está hecho?" Preguntó una voz, la cual claramente captó perteneciente a Yaxley.
Jugson asintió. "Selwyn, ayúdame a llevarlos" le indicó a uno de los mortifagos que llevaba con él. "Wilkes, ¿hacia dónde?"
La segunda presencia que acompañaba a Yaxley se giró hacia Jugson mientras comenzaban a andar, levitando los cadáveres.
"Oh, te va a encantar."
—
El sol parecía surcar el cielo de Londres cómo sucedía con poca frecuencia. Un montón de familias se amontonaban en el lugar, buscando huevos de pascua mágicos; una estúpida tradición muggle que los magos habían adoptado, al igual que muchas otras que le resultaban grotescas. Esperaba que, con fortuna, alguno de esos desgraciados resultara ser parte de la Orden.
Voldemort no brindó indicaciones específicas más allá de los anuncios en el Callejón Diagon, esto sólo era un juego. A Jugson no le parecía divertido, pero a sus compañeros les parecía hilarante.
Dejaron el montón de cadáveres en una zona cercana, una que sólo encontrarían aquellos que encontraran "el huevo de oro", lo llamó Rodolphus Lestrange que se divertía a montones con la próxima miseria de quienes encontraran los cuerpos.
Jugson esperó, con un grupo de sus compañeros a la distancia, aguardando a que alguien diera con los cadáveres. Malfoy y MacNair se habían infiltrado, pretendiendo ser simples civiles en búsqueda de huevos.
"No les parecerá tan gracioso buscar huevos otra vez" se burló Rookwood, y un par de risas se escucharon en coro. Jugson mantenía la vista centrada en la escena. Sabía que a Alec no le haría gracia que involucraran a su hermana en esto, probablemente por eso no se encontraba presente esa mañana.
Atisbó a Malfoy pretendiendo sorpresa mientras llegaba después de una chica pelirroja, no estaba seguro quien. Más personas llegaron, y entonces los gritos empezaron a oírse.
"¡Ayuda, ayuda!" Alguien gritaba.
¿Pero qué ayuda esperaban?
Ya estaban muertos.
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“DEAD POETS SOCIETY” READING LIST
I’ve found a list with all books and texts mentioned in Dead Poets Society. There will be a link at the end, but just for making everything more comfortable i’ll also copy it right there:
“Ulysses” (1833) by Alfred, Lord Tennyson
A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1590-96) by William Shakespeare
“O Captain! My Captain!” (1865) by Walt Whitman
Walden (1854) by Henry David Thoreau
“She Walks In Beauty” (1814/5) by George Gordon, Lord Byron
“To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time” (17th c.) by Robert Herrick
original post: https://bookriot.com/2014/06/11/dead-poets-society-reading-list/
and a few more:
“The Ballad of William Bloat” by Raymond Calvert
“The Prophet” by Abraham Cowley
“The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost
“The Congo” by Vachel Lindsay
“Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day” by William Shakespeare
“O Me! O Life!” by Walt Whitman
#dead poets society#poetry#literature#dark academia#dark academia aesthetic#books#inspiration#neil perry#todd anderson#charlie dalton#knox overstreet#richard cameron#steven meeks#gerard pitts#mr keating#light academia#dead poets society edit
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Trích dẫn yêu thích của bạn?
1. Nếu đã trốn thoát khỏi sự yêu thích nồng nhiệt ấy, tự nhiên sẽ chẳng có những đau khổ bất chợt ghé thăm. - Thất lạc cõi người | Dazai Osamu
2. Lời thật lòng ở cõi đời này vốn chẳng nhiều, đôi má hồng của một người con gái còn hơn cả hàng ngàn câu nói. - Rickshaw Boy (Lạc đà Tường tử) | Lão Xá
3. Cô ấy phải làm được độc nhất vô nhị, có thế mới xứng với mối thâm tình vô song của anh. - Mười năm thương nhớ | Thư Hải Thương Sinh
4. Nhớ tháng ngày ta bé ton hon
Anh thích trò chuyện, còn em thích cười
Sóng đôi hai đứa, đào rợp bóng
Chim cao giọng hót, gió xao động rừng
Say giấc lúc nào, chẳng tự rõ
Hoa trong mộng ấy biết rơi bao nhành?
Hoa trong mộng ấy biết rơi bao nhành? | Tam Mao
5. Chẳng gì có sức thuyết phục hơn thời gian cả, bởi thời gian có thể thay đổi hết thảy mà không cần thông báo cho chúng ta. Vật đổi sao dời, là điều mà ai đi chăng nữa cũng chẳng thể chuyển xoay. Hãy quên người mà ta không có được ấy đi, những chuyện mà ta không thể làm gì ấy nữa, chi bằng quên hết đi. - Sống | Dư Hoa
6. Con người vì bản chất của sự sống mà sống, chứ chẳng phải vì bất kỳ thứ gì ngoài sự sống mà sống cả. - Sống | Dư Hoa
7. Một người phụ nữ có khí chất thực sự, chẳng bao giờ khoe khoang những gì cô ấy có, cũng chẳng nói với ai cô ấy từng đọc những cuốn sách nào, từng đặt chân đến nơi đâu, có bao nhiêu chiếc váy, từng mua món trang sức nào. Bởi vì cô ấy không có cảm giác tự ti. - Điệu múa xoay vòng | Diệc Thư
8. Cái gọi là vực sâu vạn trượng, nhảy xuống rồi, cũng chính là vạn dặm công danh. - Hướng về giản dị nơi tim | Mộc Tâm
9. Bạn sinh ra với đôi cánh trên mình, sao lại cam lòng bò chậm suốt chặng đường như loài sâu kiến? - You have wings | Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi
10. Tôi luôn nghĩ rằng sau tuổi 18 là tuổi 19, sau tuổi 19 là tuổi 18, còn tuổi 20 thì mãi mãi chẳng đến bao giờ. Nhưng hiển nhiên là thời gian không nghĩ như vậy, tuổi 20 cứ bước đến lặng lẽ như vậy. - Rừng Na uy | Haruki Murakami
11. Tục sự tục vật khả nại, tục nhân bất khả nại. (Những chuyện dung tục, vật dung tục còn chịu được chứ kẻ dung tục chịu sao nổi) - Chim vân tước hót cả ngày | Mộc Tâm
12. Phải nhìn bằng trái tim thì mới thấy rõ ràng, những thứ thật sự quan trọng, mắt thường chẳng thấy được đâu. - Hoàng tử bé | Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
13. Tôi biết em ngớ ngẩn, phù phiếm, và có một cái đầu trống rỗng. Nhưng tôi yêu em. Tôi biết rõ mục đích và lý tưởng của em, chúng tầm thường và dung tục. Nhưng tôi yêu em. Tôi biết em chỉ là hàng loại 2, nhưng tôi yêu em. - The Painted Veil | William Somerset Maugham
14. Tôi gặp người, tôi nhớ rõ khuôn mặt người. Thành phố này sinh ra đã phù hợp để yêu đương, người sinh ra đã phù hợp với linh hồn của tôi. - Hiroshima, My Love | Marguerite Duras
15. Sau khi em đi, tôi đã sống một cách thật nghiêm túc. - Xứ tuyết | Kawabata Yasunari
16. Chưa nhận được sự cho phép, tôi đã tự tiện thích em vô cùng, có lỗi quá. - Đọc thầm | Priest
17. Thời gian quyết định việc bạn sẽ gặp được ai trong cuộc đời mình, trái tim của bạn quyết định việc bạn sẽ là người hiện diện trong cuộc đời bạn, mà hành động của bạn quyết định việc đến cuối cùng thì ai sẽ là người có thể ở lại. - Walden | Henry David Thoreau
18. Trước giờ người ta chỉ tin tưởng điều mà họ muốn tin tưởng. - Cựu hoan nhược mộng | Diệc Thư
20. Trưởng thành là sự khó khăn khi đứng giữa thoả hiệp cùng kiên trì. - Tiệm tạp hoá Namiya | Higashino Keigo
21. Mặc kệ tất cả những người trên thế giới này nói gì đi nữa, tôi vẫn cảm thấy rằng suy nghĩ của bản th��n mới là chính xác. Cho dù người khác thấy thế nào đi nữa, tôi sẽ chẳng bao giờ làm nhiễu loạn nhịp điệu của bản thân. Những chuyện mình thích tự nhiên có thể kiên trì thôi, đã không thích rồi thì có làm sao cũng chẳng thể lâu dài được. - Rừng Na uy | Haruki Murakami
22. Truyền thuyết kể rằng, bởi vì ở Bắc Cực quá lạnh lẽo, vừa mở miệng nói chuyện thì lời nói đã hoá thành băng, chẳng thể nghe được, vậy nên người ở đó đành phải mang băng ấy về hơ lửa để nghe. Tình yêu sao? Đầu tiên dùng lời ngon ngọt để cắt băng cắt tuyết, cắt chúng thành những mảnh vỡ đầy tinh xảo, đun lên với rượu, như vậy, ta sẽ được hương vị khiến người đắm say. Lúc tình đương nồng, đừng dùng bếp lửa, hãy dùng một ngọn nến thôi, lại thêm một ly coffee, có thế mới không say ngất ngưởng được, để lại cho ta chút tỉnh táo duy trì. Nếu thất tình, không kịp chờ đến khi băng tuyết tan hết, thôi thì một mồi lửa cháy, đốt thành một mùa xuân mới vậy. - Nấu tuyết | Lâm Thanh Huyền
23. Chúng ta luôn thích lấy câu "Thuận theo tự nhiên" để qua quít những long đong lận đận, trắc trở đường đời. Lại có rất ít người chịu thừa nhận rằng, bản chất của thuận theo tự nhiên, thực ra là sự không cưỡng cầu sau khi đã cố làm hết khả năng, mà không phải hành vi chỉ biết xoè hai tay ra với vẻ thất bại. - Ricas
24. Chẳng ai có cuộc sống vẫn luôn hoàn mỹ cả, nhưng cho dù lúc nào đi chăng nữa, cũng phải nhìn về phía trước, ôm trong mình đầy những hi vọng, cứ như vậy ta sẽ đánh đâu thắng đó. - Tát dã | Vu Triết
25. Nếu anh gặp lại em, sau bao năm xa cách, nên chào em thế nào? Là nước mắt, là lặng câm. - When we two parted | George Gordon Byron
26. Sau này, cuộc sống của anh cũng chẳng tốt hơn trong tưởng tượng, một cuốc sống có tốt, có xấu, vàng thau lẫn lộn, thời gian cứu anh thoát khỏi vực sâu, đồng thời cũng đẩy anh xuống một vực sâu mới. Mặt biển gợn sóng xôn xao, mỗi đoá bọt nước đều là con sóng lớn. Trong khoảnh khắc ấy, anh soi rõ mình trong biển, anh chỉ ngồi đó, không nói một lời. Nhưng tôi biết, tất cả những gì tốt đẹp về tương lai, xuất hiện ngay ở trong trí tưởng tượng khi ta nghĩ về. Mà sự chia xa của hai ta, chính là ý nghĩa của gặp gỡ. Ngồi cùng chàng trên một con thuyền, thuyền vào bến rồi ta có chốn về riêng. - Vương miện gai | Thuyền Độc Mộc
27. Tất cả những kiên cường đều là kén bướm của sự mềm mại. - Quầy hàng quà vặt trên thị trấn Vân Biên | Trương Gia Giai
28. Trước giờ sự thực chưa từng có lỗi với ai cả, người có lỗi nhất ở đây chỉ có chính bản thân mình. Xin lỗi vì đã không cho cậu ăn uống đủ đầy, xin lỗi vì đã không cho cậu đi ngủ đúng giờ, xin lỗi vì hay khiến cậu bị bệnh, xin lỗi vì lúc nào cũng quên quan tâm đến xúc cảm của cậu. Xin lỗi nhé, chỉ biết nghĩ cách đi yêu người khác mà quên mất cậu - người yêu mình nhất. - Yêu bản thân là bắt đầu cho sự lãng mạn trọn đời | Vương Nhĩ Đức
29. Câu "Nhường cô ấy ba phần" mà anh hay nói, chẳng phải ba phần của "ba phần nước lặng, bảy phần bụi trần", mà là ba phần của "ba phần trăng sáng chiếu khắp cõi đời". - Vi thành | Tiền Chung Thư
30. Nguyện người mãi mãi bình an, dù cho hai ta đời đời không gặp. - Mười năm thương nhớ | Thư Hải Thương Sinh
31. Trước khi gặp cô ấy, tôi không sợ chết, không sợ việc đi xa, cũng chưa từng sầu lo vì năm tháng dài rộng. Bây giờ lại chưa bao giờ như lúc này, suy nghĩ rõ ràng về tương lai. - Bình Như Mỹ Đường | Nhiêu Bình Như
32. Mưa rơi xuống cho người giàu, cũng rơi cho kẻ nghèo, rơi cho người nhân nghĩa, cũng rơi cho kẻ bất nhân. Thực ra, mưa chẳng công bằng, bởi vì nó rơi xuống một thế giới không tồn tại sự công bằng. - Lạc đà Tường tử | Lão Xá
Weibo | Linh Lung Tháp
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Hollywood Reporter, November 20
Cover: Spotify’s Daniel Ek and Dawn Ostroff unveil a plan to harness Hollywood talent and exclusive podcasts to become the world’s #1 audio platform
Page 10: Contents
Page 14: Contents
Page 21: The Report -- Star Wars Uncertainty Extends to Disney’s Lucasfilm Leader Too
Page 22: What the End of the Paramount Decrees Actually Means
Page 24: Taylor Swift vs. Scooter Braun and the Imminent Rerecording War
Page 26: More Joker -- Warners’ 1B Reasons to Say Yes
Page 28: Box Office, Broadcast TV, Cable TV, Billboard Hot 100, Billboard 200, Closer Look -- Apple TV + Audience So Far
Page 30: Awards Season -- Best Picture -- Joker, The Good Liar, Ford v Ferrari, Best Original Screenplay -- Lena Waithe for Queen & Slim, Best Actress -- Jessie Buckley in Wild Rose, Best Supporting Actress -- Margot Robbie in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Zhao Shuzhen in The Farewell
Page 32: 7 Days of Deals -- It’s Showtime for A24-produced Features on Television, $500M Price Is Right for Sony’s GSN Takeover, Rights Available -- The Districts by Johnny Dwyer, Revelation by Bobi Gentry Goodwin, Film -- Nicolas Cage, Spike Lee, Mark Wahlberg and Tom Holland, Sam Worthington and Russell Crowe, Michael De Luca
Page 33: Television -- Sarah Michelle Gellar, Vanessa Bayer, Kingsley Ben-Adir, Nick Cannon, Clive Owen, Jenni Konner and Sarah Treem, Digital -- Joe and Anthony Russo, Riley Keough, Bill Murray and Alyssa Milano, Eddie Murphy, Gary Oldman, Real Estate -- Nick Jonas and Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Rep Sheet -- Mia Maestro, Valerie Weiss, Drake Doremus, Tionne “T-Boz” Watkins, Victoria Mahoney, Julia Fox, Next Big Thing -- Jonah Hauer-King
Page 37: About Town -- Cenk Uygur: ‘I’m Going to Maul Them’
Page 38: R.I.P. Retail Therapy: A Fond Farewell to Barneys, Mike Nichols and Sidney Lumet and Roman Polanski: Three New Reads on Larger-Than-Life Moviemaking
Page 40: Yes, I Did Say That! Taylor Swift, John Stankey, Elizabeth Banks, Byron Allen, Julia Wolov on Louis C.K., Gayle King, Alex Zhu, Jeff Probst, Flashback -- Courteney Cox in 2014
Page 42: HFPA and THR’s Golden Globes Ambassador Party -- Kaitlyn Dever and Olivia Wilde and Beanie Feldstein, Daniel Kaluuya and Emilia Clarke, Jacob Tremblay and Rob Gronkowski, Kate Beckinsale and Jamie Foxx and Tyrese Gibson, Adam Scott, Will Ferrell and Paul Rudd and Robert Pattinson, Greta Gerwig and Amy Pascal, Ali Wong and Chrissy Metz, Florence Pugh and Joe Keery and Ginnifer Goodwin and Jameela Jamil, Natasha Lyonne and Jill Soloway and Shakina Nayfack, Dylan Brosnan and Pierce Brosnan and Lorenzo Soria and Paris Brosnan, Justin Hartley and Bonnie Arnold, Sam Taylor-Johnson and husband Aaron
Page 43: The Big Bash Gala -- Megan Colligan and son Lukas Roybal, Nina Jacobson, Mike Shumard, Susan Moseley and Priscilla Valldejuli and Sherry Lansing and Laura Lizer, Mike Daly, Michael Green and Rob Steinman and Dan Gardenswartz
Page 44: Rambling Reporter -- Finding Jack’s directors originally wanted Elvis Presley to bring back from the dead but had to settle for James Dean, Noah Baumbach’s agent Jeremy Barber has cameos in three of his films including Marriage Story, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington finally won the top prize at the 1939 Cannes Film Festival, Idris Elba is now shilling for Ford but he used to work on their assembly line, Power Dining -- Dana Walden, Jeremy Zimmer, T Bone Burnett, Billy Porter, Halm Saban, JoJo Siwa, Bruce Willis, Olivia Munn, Michael Ovitz, Ben Stein, Bob Simonds, Roy Price, John Branca, Jennifer Lopez and Alex Rodriguez, Common, Laura Dern
Page 46: Hitched, Hatched, Hired
Page 50: The Business -- Lisa Katz and Tracey Pakosta
Page 52: Law & Policy -- The Streaming Wars’ Wild West: Programmers vs. Distributors
Page 54: The Race -- Are Films About Slavery Good for African Americans?
Page 56: Behind the Screen -- Finding the Revs and Roars of Ford v Ferrari
Page 62: Style -- Wine for Everyone on Your List
Page 64: Send Me the Same Stuff the Guys Get -- Don’t buy into antiquated stereotypes and assume women want wine as gifts
Page 66: Cover Story -- Spotify the Storyteller
Page 72: Producers Roundtable -- Debra Martin Chase, Peter Chernin, Charlize Theron, Dan Lin, Emma Tillinger Koskoff and David Heyman
Page 80: Awards Season Playbook -- Directing -- James Mangold of Ford v Ferrari, Taika Waititi of Jojo Rabbit, Destin Daniel Cretton of Just Mercy, Noah Baumbach of Marriage Story, Quentin Tarantino of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Bong Joon Ho of Parasite, Melina Matsoukas of Queen & Slim, Dexter Fletcher of Rocketman, Robert Eggers of The Lighthouse, Benny and Josh Safdie of Uncut Gems, Trey Edward Shults of Waves
Page 82: Writing -- These screenplays might seem fantastical but the exploration of how a dad’s love (or lack of it) shapes a man couldn’t be more real
Page 84: The making of A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
Page 88: Critic’s Notebook -- The “Plus TV” Era Is Upon Us
Page 89: Social Climbers -- Actors -- Lili Reinhart, Tom Felton, Scripted TV -- Stranger Things, TV Personalities -- Jimmy Fallon
Page 90: Backlot -- Hollywood’s Top 25 Marketing Masterminds
Page 94: How Singapore Is Shaping Asia’s Digital Future
Page 96: 90 Years of THR -- 1982 -- Tom Hanks Got His Start in Splatter and D&D Flicks
#tabloid#hollywood#spotify#daniel ek#dawn ostroff#charlize theron#will ferrell#paul rudd#robert pattinson#rob pattinson#bobby pattinson
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1. The death of Christopher Marlowe (1593)
2. William Shakespeare: The Sonnets (1609)
3. The King James Bible (1611)
4. William Shakespeare: The First Folio (1623)
5. John Milton: Areopagitica (1644)
6. Samuel Pepys: The Diaries (1660-69)
7. John Bunyan: Pilgrim's Progress (1678)
8. John Locke: Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690)
9. William Congreve: The Way of the World (1700)
10. Daniel Defoe: A Journal of the Plague Year (1722)
11. Jonathan Swift: Gulliver's Travels (1727)
12. Samuel Johnson: A Dictionary of the English Language (1755)
13. Thomas Jefferson: The American Declaration of Independence (1776)
14. James Boswell: Life of Johnson (1791)
15. Benjamin Franklin: Autobiography (1793)
16. Mary Wollstonecraft: A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792)
17. William Wordsworth: "The Prelude" (1805)
18. Jane Austen: Pride & Prejudice (1813)
19. Lord Byron: Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1812)
20. Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Shakespearean Criticism (1818)
21. Ralph Waldo Emerson: "The American Scholar" (1837)
22. Thomas Carlyle: The French Revolution (1837)
23. The uniform Penny Post (1840)
24. Thomas Hood: "The Song of the Shirt" (1843)
25. Emily Brontë: Wuthering Heights (1847)
26. Charles Dickens: David Copperfield (1849)
27. Herman Melville: Moby Dick (1851)
28. Elizabeth Gaskell: North and South (1855)
29. Charles Darwin: On the Origin of Species (1859)
30. Henry Thoreau: Walden, or Life in the Woods (1854)
31. Harriet Beecher Stowe: Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852)
32. Lewis Carroll: Alice In Wonderland (1865)
33. Wilkie Collins: The Moonstone (1868)
34. First commercially successful typewriter, USA. (1878)
35. George Eliot: Middlemarch (1871)
36. Robert Louis Stevenson: The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886)
37. Oscar Wilde: The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890)
38. Thomas Hardy: Poems (c.1900)
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The 2021 Boswords Fall Themeless League: Looking Back
In today's blog post, we look back at the recent Boswords Fall Themeless League!
After two months of challenging, engaging, and thoroughly enjoyable weekly solving, the Boswords 2021 Fall Themeless League came to a close last week. If you’re unfamiliar, the Boswords 2021 Fall Themeless League spreads out a tournament-style solving experience over nine weeks, one themeless crossword per week. Each puzzle is scored based on your answer accuracy (incorrect letters, empty…
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#ada nicolle#adam aaronson#adesina koiki#andrew kingsley#angela olson halsted#boswords#boswords 2021 fall themeless league#boswords tournament#brad wilber#Byron Walden#christina iverson#crossword#crossword tournament#crosswords#Doug Peterson#Evan Birnholz#fall themeless league#Frank Longo#Geeking Out#john lieb#julian lim#kameron austin collins#kate chin park#katja brinck#kyra wilson#matthew stock#mollie cowger#PuzzleNation#Puzzlin&039; fool#quiara vasquez
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