Robin Hood and Little John walkin’ through the forest–
alright! so! early robin hood ballads and narratives don’t have an origin story for little john, but a later ballad (robin hood and little john) does. they fight on a bridge in it, but I like looking at illustrations, so I’ve swapped out the bridge for that tree peaking out of the panel in the first panel bc I enjoy louis rhead’s illustrations a lot.
this is some kind of introduction scene after they fight and climb out of the river!
Robin Hood & Little John (edited by Stephen Knight & Thomas Ohlgren)
(via sforzesco)
the problem with autism is sometimes you want to do something (brave) but you need someone to gently walk you through each step so you know what will happen. and people don’t like doing that
(via hechiceria)
Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus
— Illustrated by Bernie Wrightson (American, 1948-2017)
(via asynja)
it’s been a thousand years and people are still arguing about jiang cheng torturing demonic cultivators. listen, real or not real doesn’t even fucking matter
if jiang cheng had a torture dungeon you know who would have loved it? wei wuxian
not joking I would kind of like to brutally murder whoever thought it was a good idea to take away clicking on a person’s name to see their reblog and make it borderline impossible to get to the original version of a post without spending ten minutes scrolling with ctrl f
Helpful tip:
If you have the post date option turned on you can click the date and it will take it to the original post like before. It’s annoying, unintuitive, and harder to click but it should work on mobile or desktop
this is the most ridiculous possible workaround thank you SO much tumblr user suffusionofyellow for sharing
(via alessandriana)
Ashley’s Sack, A mid-1800s hand-embroidered feedsack gifted from a slave mother, Rose, to her nine-year-old daughter, Ashley, when Ashley was sold away. The gift was likely passed down to Ashley’s granddaughter, Ruth Middleton, who embroidered their story on to the sack in 1921.
via reddit
(via uzumaki-mito)






