#heath and wilfred
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
quinnoliver · 5 months ago
Text
Wilfred: ....could you repeat that?
Noble: the king and Merlin seem such good friends.
Wilfred: ....they are as friends as I am with my 'friend' Heath-
Noble: meaning?
Wilfred: we're courting:)
Noble: .... So no way I can
Wilfred: no. Merlin is taken.
75 notes · View notes
quinnoliver · 1 year ago
Photo
My Tumblr mutual @an-entity-i-think (whom I'd like to be friends with) said it's Heath and Wilfred and I agree. I think it could be both ways and now I'm curious what their lies are lol
Tumblr media
112K notes · View notes
stocky2016 · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
"My subject is War, and the pity of War.
  The Poetry is in the pity." Wilfred Owen (March - 121 years ago)
"Imagine"
Owen talked of the "pity" of war
"the poetry is in the pity"
But what of the "costs" we continue to accrue
when we as a country, seem almost. broke in two.
Such "costs"can be conveniently measured...
more easily than so called "benefit" we treasure
Bur do we learn from our mistakes,
history holds a cynical view, on society's make or break.
Decisions on such foreign policy often lie
with our elected political representatives,
Whether they're in fact qualified to take us into war
is often a tantalisingly problematic narrative.
"Cost" and "loss" are inextricably linked, as
War's negative effects become ever more significant...
Our so-called responsible adults, "bequeath a so called legacy"
to up and coming generation, our heirs apparent.
Cities crumble into piles of rubble
our civilians, population of women and children,homeless
widespread conflict suggest a world of increasing global troubles
with expensive technology delivering unnecessary waste and stress
The cost of re-building and replacement,
the loss of life and mental Heath post-disorders
will continue to haunt us into our future
as "greed" and "ideology" continue to be our mentors.
"East" and "West" seem unable to reconcile their
well documented ideological aspirations
Why can't we "imagine":as Lennon's iconic song suggested ,
and become "dreamers" of "world peace" between nations.
https://www.google.com/url?q=https://www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3Dc5QpZfwyt34&sa=U&ved=2ahUKEwjnnP_BzJGFAxXoQUEAHUODABAQo7QBegQIDBAF&usg=AOvVaw3nxkYMgiyUnltTms1Pjsl7
©️G.P.S. 26th March 2024
Graphics courtesy of Google images and You Tube.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
1 note · View note
lboogie1906 · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
The Tuskegee Airmen were a group of African-American and Caribbean-born military pilots who fought in WWII. They formed the 332nd Fighter Group and the 477th Bombardment Group of the Army Air Forces. The name applies to the navigators, bombardiers, mechanics, instructors, crew chiefs, nurses, cooks, and other support personnel.
All African American military pilots who trained in the US trained at Moton Field, the Tuskegee Army Air Field, and were educated at Tuskegee University. The group included five Haitians from the Haitian Air Force and one pilot from Trinidad. It included a Hispanic or Latino airman born in the Dominican Republic.
March 22, 1942 - The first five cadets graduate from the Tuskegee Flying School: Captain Benjamin O. Davis, Jr. and Second Lieutenants Mac Ross,
Charles DeBow, L.R. Curtis, and George S. Roberts. They will become part of my the famous 99th Pursuit Squadron. List of Tuskegge Airmen.
Paul Adams (pilot)
Rutherford H. Adkins
Halbert Alexander
William Armstrong
Lee Archer
Robert Ashby
William Bartley
Howard Baugh
Henry Cabot Lodge Bohler
George L. Brown
Harold Brown
Roscoe Brown
Victor W. Butler
William Burden
William A. Campbell
Herbert Carter
Raymond Cassagnol
Eugene Calvin Cheatham Jr.
Herbert V. Clark
Granville C. Coggs
Thomas T.J. Collins
Milton Crenchaw
Woodrow Crockett
Lemuel R. Custis
Floyd J. Crawthon Jr
Doodie Head
Clarence Dart
Alfonza W. Davis
Benjamin O. Davis Jr. (C/O)
Charles DeBow
Wilfred DeFour
Gene Derricotte
Lawrence Dickson
Charles W. Dryden
John Ellis Edwards
Leslie Edwards Jr.
Thomas Ellis
Joseph Elsberry
Leavie Farro Jr
James Clayton Flowers
Julius Freeman
Robert Friend (pilot)
William J. Faulkner Jr.
Joseph Gomer
Alfred Gorham
Oliver Goodall
Garry Fuller
James H. Harvey
Donald A. Hawkins
Kenneth R. Hawkins
Raymond V. Haysbert
Percy Heath
Maycie Herrington
Mitchell Higginbotham
William Lee Hill
Esteban Hotesse
George Hudson Jr.
Lincoln Hudson
George J. Iles
Eugene B. Jackson
Daniel "Chappie" James Jr.
Alexander Jefferson
Buford A. Johnson
Herman A. Johnson
Theodore Johnson
Celestus King III
James Johnson Kelly
James B. Knighten
Erwin B. Lawrence Jr.
Clarence D. Lester
Theodore Lumpkin Jr
John Lyle
Hiram Mann
Walter Manning
Robert L. Martin
Armour G. McDaniel
Charles McGee
Faythe A. McGinnis
John "Mule" Miles
John Mosley
Fitzroy Newsum
Norman L Northcross
Noel F. Parrish
Alix Pasquet
Wendell O. Pruitt
Louis R. Purnell Sr.
Wallace P. Reed
William E. Rice
Eugene J. Richardson, Jr.
George S. Roberts
Lawrence E. Roberts
Isaiah Edward Robinson Jr.
Willie Rogers
Mac Ross
Robert Searcy
David Showell
Wilmeth Sidat-Singh
Eugene Smith
Calvin J. Spann
Vernon Sport
Lowell Steward
Harry Stewart, Jr.
Charles "Chuck" Stone Jr.
Percy Sutton
Alva Temple
Roger Terry
Lucius Theus
Edward L. Toppins
Robert B. Tresville
Andrew D. Turner
Herbert Thorpe
Richard Thorpe
Thomas Franklin Vaughns
Virgil Richardson
William Harold Walker
Spann Watson
Luke J. Weathers, Jr.
Sherman W. White
Malvin "Mal" Whitfield
James T. Wiley
Oscar Lawton Wilkerson
Henry Wise Jr.
Kenneth Wofford
Coleman Young
Perry H. Young Jr.
#africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
1 note · View note
trans-and-baby-names · 5 years ago
Text
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
780 notes · View notes
deeisace · 9 months ago
Text
Small update -
(Here) is a link to another reblog of this with a lot more info (another newspaper article including a quote from Allen and a photograph!)
And! My post arrived!
Here is his marriage certificate!
Tumblr media
ID: Certified copy of an entry of marriage given at the General Register Office
1941. Marriage solemnized at St Mary's Catholic Church, St Mary's Street, Crewe, in the District of Crewe in the County of Chester.
Number 157. Thirteenth January 1941.
Allen Caldwell, 21 years, bachelor, Barman. Residence: 46 Martin Street Crewe. Father's name and profession: John Caldwell, Labourer (Corporation).
Sylvia Copp, 18 years, spinster, Barmaid. Residence: 109 Thomas Street Crewe. Father's name and profession: not listed.
Married in the St Mary's Catholic Church according to the Rites and Ceremonies of the Roman Catholics by certificate by me, Edmund Quinn (Catholic Priest), and C Griffiths, Registrar. Twenty three C.G.
This marriage was solemnized between us, Allan (23) Allen Caldwell and Sylvia Copp, in the presence of us, Wilfred Heath and Iris Jones.
End ID.
So! It is our Allen! The age profession and name fits, and the name and profession of his father, too.
I believe the "twenty three" mark is just to confirm the mistake in spelling (Allan vs Allen) has been corrected, tho it might be something else, and is initialed by the registrar there.
I'm quite surprised they were married in a church, tbh, as opposed to a registry office, given the above, but I suppose people can surprise you, how tolerant they can be - the world of 80 years ago might've been worse on a lot of scores, but people have always been people, and that includes the good ones too!
It seems to have been presented generally as a medical thing, as indeed it might well've been - someone previously said it sounds like he's intersex, rather than trans (tho of course you can be both) - and I imagine that helped, some, with people's attitudes at the time?
Idk
Not sure how to end this, other than "look!!!!!"
In the olden days they did things so sensibly. Page 8 of The Liverpool Daily Post, 29 March 1937
Tumblr media
24K notes · View notes
damn-daemon · 5 years ago
Text
Prologue for The Pity of War
Tumblr media
I’m not sure when I’ll write more, but the prologue was really calling to me, so I’ve decided to post it on here and get a reaction from everyone. This story is something I’ll probably write a few chapters of before I do anything with it. 
The prologue takes place during WWI. I don’t claim to know everything about it, but I certainly try. 
Above all, I am not concerned with Poetry. My subject is War, and the pity of War. The Poetry is in the pity. -Wilfred Owen
 Prologue
They called him ‘the blue-eyed soldier.’ Said that he came into the field hospital thick with filth and grim like all the others. It made the hue of his eyes stand out, as bright as the sky and haunting. His uniform was tattered, the leather of his boots rotting, and there were no distinguishing marks on him, the insignia having peeled from his jacket and the orderlies having yet to collect his name.
But the eyes, they told her. You’ll know him by the eyes. 
Ruth Coleman had listened to their gossip and shook her head quietly. She hadn’t approved of their whispered judgements, but far bet it from her to stop them. They all had their ways of getting by, and little acts reminiscent of their old lives were what kept their grip of reality from slipping away. She liked to draw, when she could. A sketch of a flower or a drying sheet caught on the breeze.
But never their faces.
It would not have been hard to do so, those faces so clearly engraved upon her memory that in her mind’s eye, she could touch them and know how coarse the skin was beneath her fingers. But one day, Ruth thought, those faces might finally fade, and to commit them to paper was just another way to draw out the agony.
She’d been sketching a bird she spied earlier in the evening, her efforts dimly lit by a lantern close to empty. It had been strange, seeing the little creature. Aside from the war horses and the rats that plagued the cooks, Ruth had seen no sign of other animals. They were the intelligent ones, fleeing the war while man charged ever onward. But a flash of yellow had caught her eye, and there it was, perched on a rotting fence post. It called out once before taking to wing, in search of kinder surroundings, but that moment had resonated within her; it reminded Ruth of things she did not think of anymore, of before and the life she dared not dream to have again.
There was only the present in war, the ever plodding, colorless present.
A flash of light had caught her attention, or so her mind believed. The officers insisted they could not see the illumination rounds from where they were stationed, but Ruth had become well acquainted with lies. Lies to keep the peace, lies to ease the pain, lies to assuage the fear of a young woman so far from home. Perhaps one day, she would appreciate those little lies, but for the time being, they made her feel like a child again, unable to control her emotions, so the truth was kept from her, dictated by those who knew better.
Whatever the light had been, the front or her imagination, it led Ruth to a small figure walking toward her.
Her name was Mary. She was slight of frame, with gold locks the soldiers loved. How they begged her to remove that head scarf. One offered five quid to touch just one of her curls.
“Bed three is expected,” she said quietly. “I’d have stayed to do it myself but…”
Ruth shut her journal. “It’s alright, Mary. Go get some sleep. I’ll see you at dawn.”
He had been from Cardiff, the boy who passed, no older than eighteen. She’d known many boys who had lied about their age, as young as fifteen. They fought and died the same as the rest, although sometimes she wondered if they weren’t a touch braver than the others. They knew so little about the world, about themselves, and yet they were a world away from home, bleeding out on fields that they might have never seen had there been no war.
The orderlies did not take the dead at night, for fear of disturbing the wounded and what little sleep they received, but Ruth would not leave him in such a state. It was her job, and her honor.
She closed his distant, dark eyes and saw to it that his clothes and bandages were not caught on anything. Quietly, Ruth covered his body with a thick, green blanket, from head to toe, and placed his boots on his legs. She’d taken one of his tags, and saw to it that his personal effects – of which there were not many, a letter, a picture, a broken watch – were placed in a small basket that would remain in her possession until the morning. Desperate soldiers tended to steal whatever they could, but none should have need for a small photograph of a young woman with dark hair and bright eyes.
Ruth crossed herself and said a small prayer. She’d stopped believing that God listened ages ago, but felt compelled to act nonetheless.
It was as she finished, that she heard the sound: the quiet whimpers of a man trapped in his dreams.
Sometimes, that was all it was. The man would fidget, his breathing would even out, and there wouldn’t be another peep from him until the sun broke over the horizon. But other times, they were not so lucky. They would thrash about and call out, screaming as if they were at war right then and there. It would wake the others, sometimes triggering their own dangerous episodes. Men had been hurt this way; men had died this way.
When the first thrash came, Ruth dropped the basket and fell to her knees before the man’s bed. She threw her arms upon him, hoping to keep him as still as possible, as she began to speak into his ear.
“You’re not in the trenches,” she spoke quickly, her arms struggling to keep his down. Most of the men were stronger than her, doubly so when they believed their lives in danger. “Listen to my voice. You’re safe. You’re safe here.”
He threw her off then, hard and violently. Unable to catch herself in time, Ruth felt her forehead slam onto the frame of the next bed over. Her eyes felt crossed, and the world spun briefly.
As she sat there on the ground, momentarily stunned, Ruth noticed the bed creak.
The soldier occupying the bed she’d hit had stood up, and was using his body weight and free arm – the left having been tightly wrapped in a sling – to hold the frantic man down. She heard his deep voice saying something, calm and authoritative, but it seemed to have no effect.
Shaking her head, Ruth returned to action, grabbing both sides of the poor man’s face as her elbows held down his shoulders. Her new assistant was practically straddling the bed, holding the soldier’s legs down with his own as his right arm struggled with the two their patient possessed.
“Listen to me. Listen to me,” Ruth spoke, her voice as sweet as she could make it be. “Everything is fine. You’re alright, soldier. Look at me. Look at me.”
“His name is Danny,” the man behind her said.
“Look at me, Danny,” Ruth continued, caressing the poor man’s face. His skin was so thick with sweat, and hot to the touch. “Danny, listen to me and open your eyes.”
He did so then, wide, frightened pupils staring up at her like she wasn’t there. But she could see them slowly coming back into focus, awareness pulling at the edge of his mind. He was out of danger. Now it was time to bring him home.
“There you are,” she said softly, running her hand over him again. “Everything is fine now, Danny, alright? Everything is fine.”
His breathing slowed, eyes looking about the tent, reacquainting himself with his surroundings. Then they focused back on her.
“Oh God, did I do that to you?”
It was only then that Ruth felt the warmth alongside her eye, the pulsing just above her brow. She doubted the cut was large, but the head always bled the most and longest. There was no doubt in her mind that it looked worse than it was.
“Don’t worry about that, Danny,” she said, attempting a smile. “I’m a nurse. I can handle it, I promise. You just get some rest.”
She stood then, pulling her head scarf from her dark curls.
“You’ll be alright now, Danny,” she heard the other soldier say.
“Thanks, Tommy.”
Ruth watched the other man stand as she bunched up her scarf and raised it to her head.
“Allow me,” he said, hand outreached. She could make out the blisters on his palm. “I’m no doctor, ma’am, but I can see that wound better than you.”
She acquiesced, handing the bunched cloth over rather than make another scene. They had undoubtedly woken up a few of the other soldiers, but they were very good at pretending they weren’t listening.
As the man pressed the cloth against her brow, Ruth got a good look at him. His face was thin with high cheekbones, his hair shaved at the sides like many soldiers hoping to prevent lice, and his eyes…
They were right. She did know ‘the blue-eyed soldier’ by them.
Her hand reached up, grabbing the cloth from him and placing pressure of her own. “You should go back to sleep, soldier. You just got in today, from what I’ve heard.”
He nodded slowly, settling back onto his bed.
“I want to thank you, ma’am,” he said, looking up at her. Most soldiers tended to look away when they spoke, perhaps at their hands or something else just to the left or right of her, but this man looked directly at her, with no hesitation or sign of moving away. “He’s a friend from back home.”
“I should be the one thanking you,” she admitted, never a fan of praise herself. “You’re a good friend to him.”
Now he did look away, to Danny, who had already fallen asleep again.
“I don’t know about that.”
“What’s your name, soldier?” she asked, hoping to avoid him slipping into melancholy as most soldiers were prone to do.
“Sergeant Thomas Shelby, Small Heath Rifles, ma’am.”
“Well, Sergeant Shelby, I’d offer to shake your hand, but my right one is occupied, as is your left one. I’m afraid it would make for an awkward affair.”
He nodded. “So it would, ma’am.”
The rest of the night was blessedly quiet, allowing Ruth to see to the wound she had received. In the morning, the orderlies took away the boy from Cardiff and replaced him with another wounded soldier from some other town nowhere near where they were. She watched the affair quietly, as did Thomas Shelby and his blue eyes.
Before she turned in, Ruth returned to his bedside and held out her right hand.
“I believe I owe you this, Sergeant Shelby.”
There was a ghost of a smile on his face when his hand took hers, his grip strong, callouses like sandpaper against her skin.
That was the first of seven days Ruth Coleman knew Thomas Shelby during the Battle of the Somme.
Seven days was all it took for neither to ever forget about the other.
65 notes · View notes
6hillgrove · 4 years ago
Text
45% Increase In Demand For Allotments Due To COVID-19 Accentuates 18 Month Backlog –The Black Farmer Calls For Church, State And Private Land Owners To Make More Allotment Space Available For ‘Farming Lite’
Tumblr media
A 45% spike in the interest in obtaining information about urban allotments during the coronavirus outbreak accentuates 6-18 month waiting lists, according to the National Allotment Society (NAS). There is an estimated 330,000 allotment plots today in Britain, the vast majority of which are the responsibility of local councils. The National Trust has also provided many sites. The National Allotment Society recommends that authorities provide 20 plots per 1000 households. For 20 years, the NSALG has been promoting National Allotments Week (10th – 16th August 2020). Canvasing of 500 councils by the NAS with 150 responding in April 2020, indicated that 40% of them had seen a “significant increase in applications to the waiting list”, with a 300% increase in one case. According to the APSE: *The average waiting time for an allotment plot is 6-18 months according to 51% of council respondents. *Just 12% of council respondents could guarantee a plot within 6 months. *69% of councils responding had 100-400 people on a waiting list for an allotment compared to 75% in 2018. *49% stared that over 18 months waiting time was the average. Rather than responsibility for allotment space purely being placed on local councils, The Black Farmer, Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones MBE, says: “The Government, Ministry of Defence, Church of England all own vast swathes of land and could be doing a lot more to welcome people from diverse urban cultures – but particularly black people – into allotments and ultimately into the countryside”. Also, overseas companies own 279,523 acres of land. “Urban allotments provide a fantastic onramp into farming, functioning as ‘Farming Lite’ for young people who might like to dip their toe in”. Emmanuel-Jones says: “Tending to my father’s allotment in Birmingham, aged 11 years, I made a promise to myself that I’d own a farm one day. To me, that small green patch was an oasis and an opportunity to escape from the cramped two-up, two-down terraced house I shared with my family of 11. It took 30 years of hard graft – from leaving school aged 16, to the army. As a child of the Windrush generation, it means something to own and tend land”. “Gatekeepers of pastoral Britain have the power to make a difference and it’s time they were challenged to do so”. Echoing the National Allotment Society, Emmanuel-Jones believes central government should start seeing allotments as part of the answer to national food security and acknowledging the valuable role that they play in raising public health and well-being. -ENDS- Images: (Please click on link below to download) https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1JTK2X7_CUZN2_UyzJn5vJMMh1VKeZF8x?usp=sharing About National Society of Allotments: www.nsalg.org.uk The National Allotment Society (NAS) is the leading national organisation upholding the interests and rights of the allotment community across the UK. We work with government at national and local levels, other organisations and landlords to provide, promote and preserve allotments for all. We offer support, guidance and advice to our members and those with an interest in allotment gardening. In 2011, His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales kindly agreed to become the Patron of the Society. The Prince is an avid gardener himself and advocate of green issues, he is also keen to promote and protect the UK's enduring traditions. About The Black Farmer / Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones MBE: Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones MBE (born 7 November 1957) is a British businessman, farmer, and founder of "The Black Farmer" range of food products. He was the Conservative Party candidate for the Chippenham constituency for the 2010 general election. Emmanuel-Jones was born in Clarendon, Jamaica, but in 1961 he moved with his parents to the United Kingdom. They settled in Small Heath in Birmingham, where he was one of nine children living in a small terrace house. After working in the catering industry Emmanuel-Jones enrolled on a training scheme that led to a job working for Peter Bazalgette on the BBC television series Food and Drink. He later continued to work in television, as a producer and director for 15 years and appeared in the Robert Llewellyn production Carpool on 22 January 2010. ‘Cameron's Black Tory’, shown on Channel 4 after the General Election on 6 June 2010, filmed Emmanuel-Jones over a four-year period in his bid to become the Conservative Party MP for the nominally Liberal Democrat seat of Chippenham. Emmanuel-Jones' television career gave him the capital to buy Higher West Kitcham Farm, on the border of Devon and Cornwall in St Giles on the Heath, Launceston, which he continues to farm. He became known to the locals who helped him initially with farming as "The Black Farmer", which inspired him to set up the brand of the same name, whose products include awarding-winning sausages, chicken, ham and sauces. He has since become involved in setting up the Black Farmer Scholarship, which aims to help and encourage ethnic minorities to work in the rural community, an area where to date they have been under-represented. This aim has been made into a Channel 4 TV series, Young Black Farmers, a series of three, which sees him take a group of nine inner-city school leavers from ethnic minorities on a scholarship on his Devon farm. Emmanuel-Jones was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2020 New Year Honours for services to British farming. Emannuel-Jones set up a marketing agency in London, specialising in food brands, including Lloyd Grossman, Kettle Chips and Plymouth Gin. He is married and the couple have a son and a daughter. He has an adult son from his first marriage.
For more information, please contact: Richard Hillgrove, 6 Hillgrove PR. Mobile. 07958701775. Email. [email protected]
0 notes
nomdeguerreblogs · 7 years ago
Note
what are your thoughts on Freddie thorn?
Hello anon! Thoughts on Freddie Thorne. I have a few.
It’s taken me a while to get to this because Freddie in many ways symbolises what to me was great about the first series. His story runs parallel to Tommy’s in s1 in many ways; it’s about civil disobedience and choosing a life of law-breaking; it’s about the legacy of war; it’s about heritage; it’s about friendship; and it’s about love and its potential capacity to change behaviour. What s1 did, that Peaky hasn’t really since, is use characters that represented parts of society; it had a grander goal than testing Tommy’s resilience or intelligence or dedication. Tommy himself was named for the every-soldier and his story was a common one visited upon somebody who was less-ordinary. (A slight aside: every time I read poetry from WWI, authors from Edmund Blunden to Alan Seeger to Wilfred Owen, I’m amazed just how much s1 Tommy personifies their words. It’s extraordinary.)
Anyway, back to Freddie. He has clearly shared Tommy’s life from childhood through war and out of it again. There is the residual legacy of friendship in The Garrison scene in the pilot when they bring Danny back, and in the scene by the canal, as well as of course the tunnel flashbacks. But, Freddie’s response to the disempowerment felt by soldiers as they followed orders given by superiors that were often at best indifferent to their lives and at worst callous or simply bad, was to take up a political call-to-arms and the fight for the common good. Tommy, on the other hand, took up the mantra of every man for himself, a idea of meritocracy if you like. They were both trying to screw the establishment, but Freddie had compassion that Tommy either never quite had or lost in the mud. I think it’s interesting Freddie loved Ada who is the Shelby most similar to Tommy. Freddie himself points this out in 1.01: ‘the crown of a prince, soon to be King I bet,’ and ‘the only princess of the royal family of the Kingdom of Small Heath’. The other subtext of those lines of course is that he has no respect for the Shelbys and their undertakings, the way they use their influence is just as bad in his book as the upper classes; cruel and self-serving.
Freddie essentially exists as a counterpoint to Tommy. He is less about family - time and again Ada comes second to the cause - and more about society. Tommy is the reverse, he couldn’t give a toss about society, but does care a lot about his family; his response to a night with Grace is to semi-propose, Freddie’s commitment is a while coming. But it’s more complex than that, Tommy is trying to impose himself on the world, and Freddie refuses that imposition (until he’s compromised by the jailbreak). Quite legitimately. Why should you leave a city, your hometown, because your pregnant girlfriend/wife’s brother made a deal? For a bribe? Freddie was the original thorn in Tommy’s side (a reminder against hubris), and then that mantle fell to Ada who became an amalgam of both Thornes in s2; cutting her brother down with home truths but never quite able or willing to leave the Shelby fold. It’s a pity Iddo Goldberg left to do Salem because as a free agent, Freddie’s judgement about Tommy was clearer and sharper, and a character with unbending principles existing alongside the events of s2 and s3 would have been interesting. Quite how Ada felt about her husband in the years between the end of s1 and the start of s2 remains, unfortunately, a bit of a mystery. They’ve made a life together in London; but it seems there’s a kernel of truth in the moment Tommy discounts the depth of Ada’s grief at the funeral. I suspect she was never as important as politics to him, and part of her really did want to be treated like a princess; but she compromised, became involved, found another family of sorts in the movement, loved his integrity and came to think of the Shelbys as shallow and venal. Ultimately though, without him to anchor her, wanting an outlet for the care she has, needing security, she drifts back.
32 notes · View notes
quinnoliver · 9 months ago
Text
I'm supposed to do school work, you know?
Wilfred: why's the king mad?
Heath: his morning was interrupted by George.
Wilfred: is that it?
Heath: ....he was busy with Merlin.
Wilfred: was there an urgent matter to discuss?
Heath: ....*sigh* they were shag-
Wilfred: whoa! Stop! ....How did George not notice that?
Heath: it's George. He didn't even know they were together.
Wilfred: that's.....sort of impressive.
117 notes · View notes
an-entity-i-think · 1 year ago
Photo
(I parasocially think of you fondly but I have no idea how to make friends anymore??? I sure would love to be friends with you tho!!!!)
And I imagine it's something ridiculous like:
Wilfred, hyping himself up all day to finally ask Heath out: I can do this I can do this ALRIGHT LETS GO LETS-
Heath: Hey I heard there was a new stall opening up tomorrow, did you want to go and see it with me?
Wilfred, not good with switching lanes: FUCK um no! I'm uh busy haha ummm helping Merlin with a thing- um anyways gottagobye-
Heath: ...okay?
LATER (the next morning)
Heath, seeing Merlin with a basket of laundry: oh hey! Have you seen Wilfred by any chance?
Merlin: hmm no I haven't seen him in like a week I think *gets distracted*
Heath, grinding his teeth: that mother fucker LIED
And then Wilfred is too embarrassed to say he spent the whole morning in his room cringing to himself and refuses to lie again so he just stays silent about it which just makes Heath even more pressed about it lmao
Tumblr media
112K notes · View notes
gotojobin · 7 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
#Hearthstone #KingDevinJoseph #TheKingOfHearthstone #BlizzardentErtainment #warcraft #ExpertGamer #GotoJobin #キングデビンジョセフ The artwork for this card comes from the World of Warcraft Trading Card Game "The Hunt for Illidan" series, for the card Kurzon the False. Lord Jaraxxus was added fairly early in the game's initial development. At the time the game had two heroes for each class, one representing the Alliance and one representing the Horde, the Alliance warlock being Wilfred Fizzlebang. When a developer from the World of Warcraft team who was playtesting the game commented "I hope there's a Lord Jaraxxus card in this [Wilfred Fizzlebang] deck", Ben Brode realised "There should be a Jaraxxus card!" and set about designing the card. Given the Alliance warlock hero at the time of Jaraxxus' design, the card therefore originally had a good chance of being played by Fizzlebang, faithfully reenacting the classic scene where the gnome summons and is destroyed by the eredar lord.[18] Some of Lord Jaraxxus' soundbites from his appearance in World of Warcraft's Trial of the Crusader encounter have been reused for his emotes in Hearthstone. Previously, completing a game as Lord Jaraxxus would always grant warlock experience, even if the player was in fact playing another class (such as a priest acquiring Lord Jaraxxus using Thoughtsteal). However, this bug has now been fixed, and experience will always be granted to the player's selected class. Light's Champion, a minion released with The Grand Tournament, used to be able to silence a Lord Jaraxxus hero. This would allow Light's Champion to remove attack buffs from Jaraxxus, such as from Heroic Strike or Savage Combatant. Silencing Jaraxxus would also remove the Frozen status from Jaraxxus. In addition, a Jaraxxus hero set to 1 Health with Repentance would be restored to 15 Heath when silenced.[19] With the release of Patch 4.0.0.10833, Lord Jaraxxus can no longer be targeted by Light's Champion.
0 notes
gtarealestatepros · 7 years ago
Text
GTA Listings 10th April 2018
Listings Selection For 10th April 2018 - Greater Toronto Area
A selection of some of the top listings from 10th April 2018 - from the Greater Toronto Area - including Toronto, Mississauga, Brampton and all the main GTA suburbs.
Street and TownMLS CodeLink 2401 Doulton PlaceW40912032401 Doulton Place 25 Barberry PlaceC409013825 Barberry Place 1050 16th SideroadN40904561050 16th Sideroad 5 Dewbourne AvenueC40907445 Dewbourne Avenue 2 Street Ives CrescentC40902882 Street Ives Crescent 125 South DriveC4090533125 South Drive 14 Riverside BoulevardN409116614 Riverside Boulevard 65 Northdale RoadC409122965 Northdale Road 177 Sandringham DriveC4090353177 Sandringham Drive 120 Aintree TerraceW4089607120 Aintree Terrace 56 Barrydale CrescentC409065056 Barrydale Crescent 6 Glen Edyth DriveC40904086 Glen Edyth Drive 95 Risebrough AvenueC409134395 Risebrough Avenue 11 Riverside CrescentW409040411 Riverside Crescent 105 Angus Glen BoulevardN4089777105 Angus Glen Boulevard 5 Orchard StreetN40904365 Orchard Street 427 Horsham AvenueC4091543427 Horsham Avenue 250 Elton Park RoadW4090901250 Elton Park Road 101 Golfdale RoadC4091243101 Golfdale Road 125 Maitland StreetC4090330125 Maitland Street 45 Macpherson AvenueC409020545 Macpherson Avenue 15 Rolling Green CourtN409055215 Rolling Green Court 194 Martin StreetN4091242194 Martin Street 707 Crawford StreetC4090549707 Crawford Street 300 Angus Glen BoulevardN4091459300 Angus Glen Boulevard 175 W Heath StreetC4090212175 W Heath Street 78 Carley RoadN409106078 Carley Road 176 Princess AvenueC4090818176 Princess Avenue 190 Berry RoadW4091350190 Berry Road 63 Ambrose RoadC409040963 Ambrose Road 4580 Hewicks LaneW40897154580 Hewicks Lane 126 Park Home AvenueC4090322126 Park Home Avenue 148 Parkview AvenueC4090225148 Parkview Avenue 24 Flaremore CrescentC409030824 Flaremore Crescent 66 Hambly AvenueE409038066 Hambly Avenue 24 Lavender Valley RoadN409003524 Lavender Valley Road 87 Cottonwood DriveC409053587 Cottonwood Drive 341 Maplehurst AvenueC4089633341 Maplehurst Avenue 54 Old Park RoadC409101954 Old Park Road 157 Valeria BoulevardN4089938157 Valeria Boulevard 623 Glencairn AvenueC4090628623 Glencairn Avenue 21 Reesor PlaceN408991521 Reesor Place 34 N Bridgend CourtN409031834 N Bridgend Court 5657 Lakeshore RoadN40906735657 Lakeshore Road 5 Keatley DriveN40908805 Keatley Drive 28 Spruce AvenueN409015928 Spruce Avenue 21 Florence AvenueC408769221 Florence Avenue 120 W Sheppard AvenueC4090738120 W Sheppard Avenue 8 Greenhill AvenueN40897238 Greenhill Avenue 1 Orlon CrescentN40899531 Orlon Crescent 100 Tatton CourtN4090348100 Tatton Court 44 Glenview AvenueC409136244 Glenview Avenue 10 Orlon CrescentN409018810 Orlon Crescent 57 South Marine DriveE409033457 South Marine Drive 456 W Kingston RoadE4090866456 W Kingston Road 5154 Oakridge TerraceE40859965154 Oakridge Terrace 98 Dorengate DriveN409029998 Dorengate Drive 66 Garland CrescentN409049166 Garland Crescent 19 Gorman AvenueN408997219 Gorman Avenue 36 Radcliffe RoadN409075736 Radcliffe Road 15139 Rockside RoadW408994515139 Rockside Road 324 Carrier CrescentN4090028324 Carrier Crescent 90 Newton DriveC409025290 Newton Drive 147 Chiltern Hill RoadC4090279147 Chiltern Hill Road 83 Willingdon BoulevardW409055083 Willingdon Boulevard 205 Mcwilliams CrescentW4090862205 Mcwilliams Crescent 1598 W Queen StreetW40897831598 W Queen Street 2150 Lillykin StreetW40898032150 Lillykin Street 50 Madoc PlaceN409061050 Madoc Place 252 Fisherville RoadC4090480252 Fisherville Road 18A Sherwood AvenueC408989618A Sherwood Avenue 10851 Jane StreetN409137910851 Jane Street 4 Walnut Grove CrescentN40908884 Walnut Grove Crescent 134 Poplar Heights DriveW4090527134 Poplar Heights Drive 1640 Bathurst StreetC40904461640 Bathurst Street 12 Orchard StreetN409020812 Orchard Street 22 Alhart StreetN409083522 Alhart Street 41 Airdrie RoadC409026541 Airdrie Road 336 Sugar Maple LaneN4091046336 Sugar Maple Lane 689 Via Campanile RoadN4089592689 Via Campanile Road 5 Roderick CourtN40905595 Roderick Court 33 Red Oak DriveN409145733 Red Oak Drive 62 Mosedale CrescentC409004762 Mosedale Crescent 42 Garden AvenueN409019442 Garden Avenue 34 Hill CrescentE409131034 Hill Crescent 14 Dairymaid RoadW408999314 Dairymaid Road 1124 Bridge RoadW40897221124 Bridge Road 3255 Pringle PlaceW40896473255 Pringle Place 21 Morgan AvenueN409048621 Morgan Avenue 170 Burndale AvenueC4090104170 Burndale Avenue 21 Placeantain LaneN409000321 Placeantain Lane 85 King View CrescentN400924585 King View Crescent 304 Merton StreetC4090306304 Merton Street 7 Pavillion StreetN40906707 Pavillion Street 1186 Derrald DriveW40906851186 Derrald Drive 102 Avro RoadN4090341102 Avro Road 8 Via Avenuellino RoadN40901648 Via Avenuellino Road 2250 Canonridge CircleW40915062250 Canonridge Circle 723 Street Clarens AvenueW4090345723 Street Clarens Avenue 11 Ashcreek DriveW409156211 Ashcreek Drive 1527 Garnet AvenueW40902951527 Garnet Avenue 217 S Melrose AvenueC4090459217 S Melrose Avenue 83 Hunt AvenueN409129483 Hunt Avenue 14 Ivy Lea CrescentW409076714 Ivy Lea Crescent 16 Crockart LaneN409065816 Crockart Lane 10 Larry StreetW409152310 Larry Street 36 Old Mill DriveW409018936 Old Mill Drive 12 Thornbay DriveN409118212 Thornbay Drive 811 Cosburn AvenueE4089926811 Cosburn Avenue 12 Bighorn TerraceN409017412 Bighorn Terrace 2 Wimbleton CrescentW40905642 Wimbleton Crescent 37 Summerlea StreetN409080037 Summerlea Street 16 Roseborough CrescentN409100316 Roseborough Crescent 246 Ellerslie AvenueC4090423246 Ellerslie Avenue 23 Roy Harper AvenueN408992923 Roy Harper Avenue 747 Glencairn AvenueC4091062747 Glencairn Avenue 389 Highway 47N4090574389 Highway 47 18 Elderslie CrescentN409153018 Elderslie Crescent 92 Glen Rush BoulevardC409075292 Glen Rush Boulevard 25 Maverick CrescentN409057025 Maverick Crescent 430 Kerrybrook DriveN4089622430 Kerrybrook Drive 139 Elmhurst AvenueC4090632139 Elmhurst Avenue 1303 Crossfield BendW40899781303 Crossfield Bend 47 Streetave CrescentN409032647 Streetave Crescent 3316 Liptay AvenueW40904643316 Liptay Avenue 54 Bellevue AvenueC409041354 Bellevue Avenue 403 Vellore AvenueN4091091403 Vellore Avenue 281 Sixteen Mile DriveW4091251281 Sixteen Mile Drive 92 Neville Park BoulevardE409106692 Neville Park Boulevard 302 Street Clements AvenueC4090932302 Street Clements Avenue 100 Fred Mclaren BoulevardN4090057100 Fred Mclaren Boulevard 18 Carter PlaceN409154518 Carter Place 40 Ward AvenueN408991840 Ward Avenue 22 Hamstead AvenueE409036522 Hamstead Avenue 9 Geddes CourtC40900139 Geddes Court 85 Maple Valley RoadN409047385 Maple Valley Road 12811 Mclaughlin RoadW409019512811 Mclaughlin Road 29 Purdon DriveC409025029 Purdon Drive 88 Haliburton AvenueW409060888 Haliburton Avenue 82 Summerhill GardensC409098782 Summerhill Gardens 5 Apple Orchard PathN40913975 Apple Orchard Path 61 Maroon DriveN408965161 Maroon Drive 3124 Seabright DriveW40901403124 Seabright Drive 98 Streetoyell DriveN409099798 Streetoyell Drive 119 Lebovic Campus DriveN4090807119 Lebovic Campus Drive 390 Kerrybrook DriveN4091020390 Kerrybrook Drive 220 Crystal Beach BoulevardE4090560220 Crystal Beach Boulevard 15 Streetephensons Point RoadE409004815 Streetephensons Point Road 57 Marowyne DriveC409154157 Marowyne Drive 50 Aiden DriveN409128050 Aiden Drive 2109 Wellington AvenueW40897132109 Wellington Avenue 5 Fairfield RoadC40915355 Fairfield Road 170 Connaught AvenueC4090520170 Connaught Avenue 841 Briarwood DriveE4090066841 Briarwood Drive 84 Bestview CrescentN409112784 Bestview Crescent 30 Jennifer CrescentN408979130 Jennifer Crescent 14 Fairview AvenueW409024214 Fairview Avenue 35 Hosta AvenueN409065535 Hosta Avenue 22 Snowy Meadow AvenueN409001722 Snowy Meadow Avenue 1105 Saginaw CrescentW40896861105 Saginaw Crescent 204 Thomas Alton BoulevardW4091567204 Thomas Alton Boulevard 4149 Pascal CourtW40899414149 Pascal Court 102 Glen CrescentN4090587102 Glen Crescent 33 Heslop CourtW409120733 Heslop Court 431 Spring Blossom CrescentW4090198431 Spring Blossom Crescent 76 Fortune CrescentN409059476 Fortune Crescent 16 Cosford StreetN409072016 Cosford Street 52 Sharonview CrescentN408975652 Sharonview Crescent 129 Foch AvenueW4091090129 Foch Avenue 29 Lambeth StreetW408967629 Lambeth Street 526 Pineland AvenueW4090795526 Pineland Avenue 14178 Yonge StreetN409067114178 Yonge Street 340 Fralicks Beach RoadE4091260340 Fralicks Beach Road 140 Hogarth AvenueE4090689140 Hogarth Avenue 24 Twenty Third StreetW409069324 Twenty Third Street 48 Noranda CrescentW409137648 Noranda Crescent 82 Alton AvenueE409085082 Alton Avenue 4 Bakerdale RoadN40909344 Bakerdale Road 11339 Tenth LineW409136311339 Tenth Line 14 Baleberry CrescentN409156914 Baleberry Crescent 4635 Doug Wright DriveW40911294635 Doug Wright Drive 3059 Jenn AvenueW40914903059 Jenn Avenue 573 Soudan AvenueC4091298573 Soudan Avenue 38 Brahms AvenueC409134838 Brahms Avenue 17 Catalpa CrescentN408980817 Catalpa Crescent 28 Fern Valley CrescentN408970628 Fern Valley Crescent 147 Silver Maple RoadN4090937147 Silver Maple Road 7 Bettey RoadW40907247 Bettey Road 6 Crocker DriveW40900626 Crocker Drive 125 Carlyle CrescentN4091303125 Carlyle Crescent 116 Chayna CrescentN4090314116 Chayna Crescent 57 Newington CrescentW408971657 Newington Crescent 1 Benson AvenueW40904181 Benson Avenue 19 Samuel CrescentW409144419 Samuel Crescent 421 Lees LaneW4091064421 Lees Lane 47 Amywood RoadN409044347 Amywood Road 47 Geneva AvenueC409130147 Geneva Avenue 58 Morton AvenueN409071058 Morton Avenue 47 Dina RoadN408966547 Dina Road 14 Cluff CourtE409001614 Cluff Court 1021 Dufferin StreetW40910521021 Dufferin Street 16 Balmoral HeightsN409127616 Balmoral Heights 43 Bellona StreetN409071643 Bellona Street 383 N Fernleigh CircleN4091346383 N Fernleigh Circle 9 Redbud StreetN40899219 Redbud Street 1264 Craigleith RoadW40903811264 Craigleith Road 115 Wilfred Murison AvenueN4089535115 Wilfred Murison Avenue 5390 Hollypoint AvenueW40895335390 Hollypoint Avenue 3627 Beechollow CrescentW40903353627 Beechollow Crescent 741 Grace StreetN4090283741 Grace Street 83 Senator Reesors DriveN409144983 Senator Reesors Drive 201 Torrens AvenueE4089986201 Torrens Avenue 16 Kenewen CourtC409146916 Kenewen Court 8 John Smith StreetN40897278 John Smith Street 84 Via Romano WayW409071184 Via Romano Way 24 Degas DriveN409145324 Degas Drive 569 Willow Wood DriveX4091239569 Willow Wood Drive 43 Larwood BoulevardE409089443 Larwood Boulevard 632 Garden WalkW4091434632 Garden Walk 19 Homeview RoadW409000919 Homeview Road 33 Sir Galahad PlaceN409109233 Sir Galahad Place 135 Christian Ritter DriveN4090750135 Christian Ritter Drive 905 Joe Persechini DriveN4091540905 Joe Persechini Drive 143 Wolseley StreetC4090599143 Wolseley Street 27 Donald Buttress BoulevardN409090027 Donald Buttress Boulevard 62 Cedarholme AvenueW409039062 Cedarholme Avenue 156 Fairview AvenueW4091285156 Fairview Avenue 1 Princess Valley CrescentW40900271 Princess Valley Crescent 1051 West AvenueW40911571051 West Avenue 39 Ballyhaise CrescentW408962639 Ballyhaise Crescent 796 Prest WayN4089569796 Prest Way 33 Slack Street BradfordN409097133 Slack Street Bradford 109 King StreetW4091538109 King Street 119 Jones AvenueE4090204119 Jones Avenue 151A Brandon AvenueW4091555151A Brandon Avenue 128 Bonistel CrescentW4089646128 Bonistel Crescent 7714 Black River RoadN40911037714 Black River Road 212 Silver Maple RoadN4090816212 Silver Maple Road 84 Cabin Terraceail CrescentN408972184 Cabin Terraceail Crescent 26 Gemma CourtN409118126 Gemma Court 24 Talisman CrescentN409034624 Talisman Crescent 7 N Beaverton RoadN40902757 N Beaverton Road Lt 37B Royal Fern CrescentW4090958Lt 37B Royal Fern Crescent 402 Tennyson DriveW4090116402 Tennyson Drive 54 Toledo RoadW409104154 Toledo Road 1804 Jack Glenn StreetE40900371804 Jack Glenn Street 6 Leyburn AvenueN40906726 Leyburn Avenue 14 Logan CourtW409050614 Logan Court 54 Kempsford CrescentW408994654 Kempsford Crescent 808 Eagle Ridge DriveE4090336808 Eagle Ridge Drive 1023 Coldstream DriveE40912231023 Coldstream Drive Lot 342 Lanark Street BradfordN4090944Lot 342 Lanark Street Bradford 16 Iverson DriveW409124616 Iverson Drive 23 Oren StreetN409036123 Oren Street 13 Henrietta StreetN408996813 Henrietta Street 100 Forest Edge CrescentN4089656100 Forest Edge Crescent 7223 Windrush CourtW40902467223 Windrush Court Lot 73 Loomis RoadW4090974Lot 73 Loomis Road 38 Bonavista DriveW408957038 Bonavista Drive 46 Sir Lancelot DriveN409017546 Sir Lancelot Drive 1259 Richards CrescentW40913931259 Richards Crescent 530 Pineland AvenueW4090503530 Pineland Avenue 655 Terraceafford CrescentW4090050655 Terraceafford Crescent 3925 Burdette TerraceW40910513925 Burdette Terrace 27 Romfield DriveW409106127 Romfield Drive 118 Bantry AvenueN4090496118 Bantry Avenue 4578 Concession 4 RoadE40903944578 Concession 4 Road 237 Park AvenueN4090224237 Park Avenue 2407 Overton DriveW40912122407 Overton Drive 2345 Hixon StreetW40903052345 Hixon Street 1331 W Major Mackenzie Drive 123N40910321331 W Major Mackenzie Drive 123 7 Showboat CrescentW40895397 Showboat Crescent 300 Father Tobin RoadW4091371300 Father Tobin Road 51 Creekland AvenueN409084951 Creekland Avenue 1464 Rolph TerraceW40907211464 Rolph Terrace 284 Grand Hill DriveX4091293284 Grand Hill Drive Lot 23 Yarmouth StreetW4089625Lot 23 Yarmouth Street 34 Sir Jacobs CrescentW409143534 Sir Jacobs Crescent 168 Gilmour AvenueW4091150168 Gilmour Avenue 17 N Gillete WayW409150217 N Gillete Way 108 Bergin RoadN4091026108 Bergin Road 4 Oxendon RoadW40915314 Oxendon Road 220 Calvington DriveW4090432220 Calvington Drive 9 Cannes CircleW40915709 Cannes Circle 1142 Dufferin StreetW40897121142 Dufferin Street 115 Carlson DriveN4089919115 Carlson Drive 100 Tallships DriveE4090643100 Tallships Drive 181 Hertford CrescentN4090264181 Hertford Crescent 2 Kidbrooke CrescentE40914802 Kidbrooke Crescent 126 Carolbreen SquareE4090789126 Carolbreen Square 1607 Woodbine Heights BoulevardE40908691607 Woodbine Heights Boulevard 60 Cumber AvenueE409048960 Cumber Avenue 3349 Spruce AvenueW40914893349 Spruce Avenue 11 Reach StreetN409025911 Reach Street 18 Shipley RoadW409129918 Shipley Road 3328 Sunlight StreetW40914313328 Sunlight Street 36 Collingwood AvenueW408995736 Collingwood Avenue 117 Chessington AvenueN4090717117 Chessington Avenue 16 Vedette WayN409062516 Vedette Way 313 Right Sorensen CourtW4090485313 Right Sorensen Court 353 Terraceeend PlaceW4090300353 Terraceeend Place 229 Hoover Park DriveN4091267229 Hoover Park Drive 16 Hancock StreetN409113416 Hancock Street 43 Church StreetN408980943 Church Street 154 Barrow Avenue BradfordN4091153154 Barrow Avenue Bradford 34 Attridge DriveN408984634 Attridge Drive 91 Manor Forest RoadN409149891 Manor Forest Road 8 Dearham WoodE40905348 Dearham Wood 170 Sawmill Valley DriveN4090512170 Sawmill Valley Drive 59 James StreetW409124959 James Street 99 Apache TerraceC408963099 Apache Terrace 55 Saffron StreetN409155755 Saffron Street 1037 Copperfield DriveE40904691037 Copperfield Drive 19 Whitepoppy DriveW409022919 Whitepoppy Drive 14 Jericho AvenueN409048214 Jericho Avenue 103 Rogers Terrace BradfordN4091029103 Rogers Terrace Bradford 166 Hawker RoadN4089653166 Hawker Road 220 Yorkland StreetN4090273220 Yorkland Street 92 Glenngarry CrescentN409050592 Glenngarry Crescent 40 Miley DriveN409014440 Miley Drive 16 Bradford CourtE409070116 Bradford Court 5 Harkness DriveE40898895 Harkness Drive 113 Walton DriveN4091070113 Walton Drive 2286 Bostock CrescentW40897032286 Bostock Crescent 28 Irving DriveN409035228 Irving Drive 18 Glennie DriveE409078318 Glennie Drive 81 Streetoyell DriveN408957781 Streetoyell Drive 4123 Lastrada HeightsW40914134123 Lastrada Heights 138 Shawnee CircleC4090121138 Shawnee Circle 77 Watsonbrook DriveW408963277 Watsonbrook Drive 157 Inverdon RoadW4090262157 Inverdon Road 206 Crafter CrescentX4090601206 Crafter Crescent 21 Virtue StreetW409063721 Virtue Street 73 Mills Court BradfordN408957573 Mills Court Bradford 11 Mcginty AvenueE409093111 Mcginty Avenue 3309 Columbine CrescentW40908763309 Columbine Crescent 92 Braebrook DriveE409118892 Braebrook Drive 1506 Kenilworth CrescentW40909681506 Kenilworth Crescent 72 Cavell AvenueW409037972 Cavell Avenue 1415 E Upper Sherman AvenueX40908731415 E Upper Sherman Avenue 131 Yale LaneN4090786131 Yale Lane 59 Moorcrest DriveN409137259 Moorcrest Drive 48 Cluett DriveE409063448 Cluett Drive 92 Roxborough RoadN409091692 Roxborough Road 286 Sheridan CourtN4090920286 Sheridan Court 8 Honey DriveE40903428 Honey Drive 151 E Harbourside DriveE4090553151 E Harbourside Drive 865 Columbia CourtN4090364865 Columbia Court 6 Ingham AvenueE40904356 Ingham Avenue 71 Reddenhurst CrescentN409022371 Reddenhurst Crescent 37 Crystal Glen CrescentW409025837 Crystal Glen Crescent 7 Mainard CrescentW40896097 Mainard Crescent 1036 Yates DriveW40912301036 Yates Drive 287 Silver CourtW4090434287 Silver Court 309 Palace StreetE4090580309 Palace Street 84 Peninsula CrescentN409061484 Peninsula Crescent 113 Sellers AvenueW4090373113 Sellers Avenue 973 Wildwood DriveN4090285973 Wildwood Drive 270 Silverstone DriveW4090310270 Silverstone Drive 40 Duffield RoadW408953440 Duffield Road 76 Willamere DriveE409084876 Willamere Drive 4061 Pavillion CourtW40901904061 Pavillion Court 106 Falcon RoadX4089856106 Falcon Road 5477 W Tenth Line AvenueW40897905477 W Tenth Line Avenue 94 Clairton CrescentW409017394 Clairton Crescent 11 Juldan PlaceN409133111 Juldan Place 176 Sydney CircleN4091205176 Sydney Circle 2432 Equestrian CrescentE40896832432 Equestrian Crescent 69 Eastern Skies WayN409087969 Eastern Skies Way 26 Albert StreetW408955026 Albert Street 546 Streetarwood DriveX4090836546 Streetarwood Drive 5 Firbank LaneN40907875 Firbank Lane 127 Laurelhurst CrescentN4091318127 Laurelhurst Crescent 168 Flagstone WayN4089588168 Flagstone Way 105 Heaslip TerraceE4089836105 Heaslip Terrace 60 Alicewood CourtW409138360 Alicewood Court 198 Street Marks RoadW4090227198 Street Marks Road 20 Sahara TerraceW409077720 Sahara Terrace 78 Porterfield RoadW409105478 Porterfield Road 51 Four Seasons CircleW408955851 Four Seasons Circle 23206 Miles RoadN409051523206 Miles Road 1676 Blackbird DriveW40896621676 Blackbird Drive 26 Tina CourtW409062726 Tina Court 6 Baycliffe DriveE40905986 Baycliffe Drive 28 Dolphin Song CrescentW409054028 Dolphin Song Crescent 635 Courtney Valley RoadW4090217635 Courtney Valley Road 75 Baylawn DriveE409150175 Baylawn Drive 15 Kay DriveW409132815 Kay Drive 15 Kay DriveW409132615 Kay Drive 147 Cordgrass CrescentW4089547147 Cordgrass Crescent 4 Autumn Arbour RoadW40895494 Autumn Arbour Road 2439 Musket CourtW40895912439 Musket Court 113 Clonmore DriveE4091187113 Clonmore Drive 206 Farley DriveX4091495206 Farley Drive 11 Sable CrescentE409112511 Sable Crescent 48 Masters Green CrescentW409154248 Masters Green Crescent 62 Bluebell DriveE409136662 Bluebell Drive 55 Pennsylvania AvenueW409078155 Pennsylvania Avenue
GTA Listings 10th April 2018 first appeared on: GTA Real Estate Pros 154 Bathurst St, Toronto, ON, M5V 2R3 647-362-2000 https://goo.gl/Yj7G5g
source https://www.gtarealestatepros.ca/gta-listings-10th-april-2018/
0 notes
gutesgutesgutesgutes · 7 years ago
Text
ARCHIVE OF DIGITAL ARTWORKS
DIGITAL ART ARCHIVE
Frieder Nake
Charles Csuri, Random War (1967)
Manfred Mohr
Harold Cohen, Aaron — SF MOMA 1979
new iterations
Duchamp— Rotorelief
Thomas Wilfred
Clavilux Junior, First Home Clavilux
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clavilux
Nicolas Schoffer, CYSP 1
https://www.olats.org/schoffer/archives/cyspe.htm
Nam June Paik, Participation TV
speaking into microphone, which creates visual
Lynn Hershman, Lorna (1979-84)
Interactive video
http://www.lynnhershman.com/lorna/
Cybernetics:the study of feedback in self modifying systems
-the science of communications and automatic control systems in both machines and living things.
https://vimeo.com/groups/96331/videos/80799353
Martha Boto— Light art
http://www.sicardi.com/artists/martha-boto/artists-artist-works/
Heinz Mack (founder of ZERO)
Otto Piene, Light Ballet
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvj6kaQtJjs
Robert Lazzarini, Skulls
http://www.robertlazzarini.com/skulls/
Paul Demarnis— The Edison Effect
http://thestudio.uiowa.edu/tirw/TIRW_Archive/feb06/demarinis.html
Tim’s Vermeer: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3089388/
Tim is proposing that Vermeer used a mirrored device / image to paint
via a camera obscura
Tim’s Vermeer: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3089388/
Tim is proposing that Vermeer used a mirrored device / image to paint
via a camera obscura
Jeffery Shaw— Legible City
http://www.jeffreyshawcompendium.com/portfolio/legible-city/
Bicycling through a “city of words”
a “virtual urban space”
Gene Youngblood Expanded Cinema
https://www.guggenheim.org/exhibition/zero-countdown-to-tomorrow-1950s60s-2
Toshio Iwai— Piano as image
Georg Nees
Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T) — 9 Evenings (Exhibition)
The Dream Machine
The Living Brain
The artist as innovator
Schilling’s Optical System, 1983
inspired by Charles Wheatstones mirror stereoscope
THE SCHILLING EFFECT
The materiality of the cinematic apparatus
Eadweard Muybridge: morphing, freezing separating
Rebecca Cummings— Shadow Locomotion: 128 Years After Muybridge, The Red Barn, Stanford (2004)
wrong link—
Uncovering suppressed phenomena
Repetition into asset
Paul Demarnis— The Edison Effect
http://thestudio.uiowa.edu/tirw/TIRW_Archive/feb06/demarinis.html
sound and conductivity
Jeffery Shaw— Legible City
http://www.jeffreyshawcompendium.com/portfolio/legible-city/
Bicycling through a “city of words”
a “virtual urban space”
Michael Naimark— predecessor for google street view with Aspen City Map
BANFF!
Luc Courchesne
Lynn Hershman
Lisa Jevbratt, Mapping the Web Infome (2001)
Alex Galloway and the Radical Software Group (RSG), Carnivore (2001-present)
Gallery 9, an online exhibition at The Walker Art Center
Gallery 9 also became a penmannt home for other work/galleries, such as adobe by
Benjamin Weil, and Art Dirth, by G.H. Hovgimyan
Martin Watternberg, Idea Line
Wilhelm Agricola de Cologne * , [R][R][F] (Remembering-Repressing-Forgetting) (2003-present)
low-fi net art locator
allows guests to “curate” a selection of online projects
turbulence
Projects like low-fi and turbulence blur institutional boundaries
MASS MoCA, Your Show Here
Connections, Jon Alpert, Eric Green, Betsy Seder and Victoria Westmead
C@C- computer aided curating, Eva Grubinger (1993)
runme.org
Readme, software art festival, First held in Moscow
Cory Arcangel
@ Whitney : Protools
Gradients: Speak to a history of abstract paintings through use of humor
Bomb Iraq, 2005
Cory found a Macintosh TV computer at Salvation Army, on it was a homemade game called “Bomb Iraq”
Emulator and description
Barbara Fluxa, Proyecto Coche, Excavando El Final Del
Fernando Garcia-Dory, Museum Pastoral
Education platforms that can result from the works themselves
CODEC:
the tension between the back and the fornt end
A range of programs
“connect three points in space”
The backend, the code, as a form of creative writing
Audio Zone, Susan Collins, 1994
Museum Highlights, Andrea Fraser, 1989
Imagining Indians, Skawennati Tricia Fragnito, 2000
Struggled to get 6 computers into a gallery— was told they must also show the institution’s website
Shredder, Mark Napier, 1998
Shreds any web page into fragments of color /image/code
Said that some people might not understand that html code is part of the webpage structure; but that shouldn’t be threatening to the piece
KOP Kingdom of Piracy, Cheang, Medosch, Shikita (2002-)
Allowed people to come and download files onto CDs, as well as free CDs of open source software
I-Love-You virus (source code, displayed on gallery wall) Daniel Garcia Andujad
Signwave Auto Illustrator, Adrian Ward, can be used on your own computer or not
Ultima Ratio, Daniel Plewe
an example of something that needs a lot of explanation
SMS Museum Guide, digitalcraft.org
I love you, digitalcraft.org
Feedback, 010101 (2007)
Used “labels” only when necessary to supply information not illustrated in the art itself
SAM (Sound-Activated-Mobile), Edward Inhatowicz (1968)
Casey Reas
Roman Verostko
5voltcore, Shockbot Corejulio (2004)
Christa Sommerer and Laurent Mignonneau, Life Writer
Jean Tinguely, Tokyo Gal
Chico Macmurtrie, The Horny Childred , 2004
Hans Haacke, Condensation Cube, 1963
David Rokeby, n-Cha(n)t, 2011
Lygia Clarke, Dialogue: Goggles
Mirrors that are twisted so you see through the eyes (or the eys?) or other people
Hachiya Kazuhiko, interdiscommunication machine
see the perspective of the other person in headset
Data Dynamics, Whitney Museum 2001
DissemniNET, Sawad Brooks and Beth Stryker
Mapping a database of stories
Camouflage Town, Adrianne Wortzel: establishing a connection between physical and virtual space
A robot that could be controlled locally and over the internet, both here and there
Mapping movements in physical and virtual space
Point to Point, Mark Napier
http://www.potatoland.org/point/
Visitors created the artwork with their movement in space (developed for a museum)
Video camera displayed as line of texts
Mapping movements in physical and virtual space
[relate to Utterback’s Untitled 5, Snibbe’s Screen Series]
netomat, Maciej Wisniewsky
A “meta-browser” that in response to words and phrases typed by viewer, retrieves texts, images, etc. from internet, flows them onto the screen
Presents internet as a infinite space
Adaptable software
Mapping dataflow of internet
Apartment, Martin Wattenberg and Marek Walczak
Web only
2-d Component: viewers type words and texts, creating a two-dimension floor plan of rooms.
The architecture is based on the themes the words expressed, then translated into navigable 3D images, that are results of internet searches of original word
Mapping Language and thought
Reverses the “Memory Palace”
P-Soup, Mark Napier
Open Studio, Andy Deck
Mapping the Web Infome, Lisa Jevbratt
Carnivore, Alex Galloway and the Radical Software Group
Artist sets a parameter and invites other artists to create “clients” which then constitute as an artwork
9 Evenings: Theatre and Engineering, 1996
The 1986 Venice Biennale
Leicester Codex, Leonardo da Vinci
Your Show Here, MASS MoCA
invited gallery visitors to curate their own program from 100 different works.
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Body Movies (2001)
Camille Utterback, External Measure Series
Rectangle (2001)
Round (2001)
External Measures (2003)
Untitled 5 (2004): rule based painting
Untitled 6 2005
Abundance (2007)
Boundary Functions (1999): the user interaction varies from place to place based on the definition of personal space in each country
Scott Snibbe, Screen Series (2002-2003) [total of 6 pieces]
Shadow (2002)
Compliant (2002)
Impression (2003)
Depletion (2003)
Concentration (2003)
Deep Walls (2003): exploits viewers shadow play
Cory Arcangel, Super Mario Clouds (2002)
David Rokeby, Dark Matter (2010)
Danny Rozin, Wooden Mirror (1999)
Erwin Driessens and Maria Verstappen, Tickle Salon (2002)
Scott Kildall and Victoria Scott, No Matter (2008)
Mark Hansen and Ben Rubin Listening Post (2010)
Christa Sommerer and Laurent Mignonneau A-volve (1993-4)
Lynn Hershman Leeson, Difference Engine #3 (1995-6)
Random International, Rain Room 2012
Lieberman, Powderly, Roth, Sugrue, TEMPT1, Watson, Eye Writer (2009)
Manning, Weather Patterns (2012)
Nathaniel Stern, Compressions (2005 - )
Lungs (Slave Labor) 2005 and Coal Fired Computer (2010) by YoHa
Super Abstract Brothers, Beige Group (2000)
Surgeon Simulator, Bossa Studios (2003)
e-ink pearl memory, Yuki Pattison, 2012
Long player, Jem Finer
Shu Lea Cheang, Net Nomad — Buy one get one
Yes men
Ubermogren
Paolo Cirio, loophole4all.com
Heath Bunting
Eva and Franco Mattes : https://0100101110101101.org/works/
Notable works:
Reenactments
The Others
Life Sharing
Participatory Platforms and the Emergence of Art
http://runme.org/
How do you archive/keep a record emergence?
1 note · View note
quinnoliver · 5 months ago
Text
Worked longer again. I'm tired.
Merlin: I need sleep. George can wake Arthur up tomorrow-
Wilfred: On behalf of all the guards in Camelot, please no
Merlin: what if....we all sleep for the day, with magic?
Heath: I don't think it's morally right
Merlin: I'm just kidding. ......but what if?
58 notes · View notes
quinnoliver · 1 year ago
Text
Wilfred the new guard
Merlin to Arthur: stop being a prat!
Wilfred: what the, Heath, that manservant just insulted the king.
Heath: oh, that's Merlin.
Wilfred: no, that's not my question. How come he's not in trouble!?
Heath: it's Merlin.
Wilfred: that doesn't explain anything.
Heath: yes it does. Everything, in fact.
Wilfred: ....Now they're kissing.
Heath: mhm
Wilfred: how's that insult lead to kissing
Heath: it's Merlin
Wilfred: .... alright
196 notes · View notes