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"The interpretation of dreams is the royal road to a knowledge of the unconscious activities of the mind."

- Sigmund Freud

 

Sigmund Freud was an Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis, a clinical method for treating psychopathology through dialogue between a patient and a psychoanalyst

 

Quotation marks

Good collection of quotation from all over the world.

You can download and share image about sad quotations .

The following are some of the best quotes from famous people :

In “Hear My Sad Story,” Polenberg, emeritus professor of history at (“A number of Negroes have been arrested,” Po...

 

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Practice any art, music, singing, dancing, acting, drawing, painting, sculpting, poetry, fiction, essays, reportage, no matter how well or badly, not to get money and fame, but to experience becoming, to find out what’s inside you, to make your soul grow. -Kurt Vonnegut

"What is more beautiful than a sea of water with a number of white-winged boats skirting its surface?

Poetry and beauty contesting with the wind and the waves!"

 

~ George Matthew Adams

 

Drumbo, Ontario

January 2019

 

Journal:

I wanted to use this sign - so I got this guy to hold them.

There’s a Heart! It's so incredible to see that you can give it back.

Words tell our stories, but art makes it possible for us to bear witness to them. -Cathy Malchiodi

...Visualize and Perceive...

Only positive things.

 

"In the midst of movement and chaos,

keep stillness inside of you."

-Deepak Chopra

 

For JWS on this day...Love you!

 

Quotation found in a book (anonymous)

Good collection of quotation from all over the world.

You can download and share image about motivational quotations .

Below are some unique quote you can read :

One of the most influential people in the modern India, Swami Vivekananda’s 153rd birth anniversary is being celebrated all...

 

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St Andrew, Great Saxham, Suffolk

 

The surviving upper light of an otherwise lost window. English, 1840s? The quotation is from the Book of Revelation 10:5-6:

 

And the angel which I saw stand upon the sea and upon the earth lifted up his hand to heaven, and sware by him that liveth for ever and ever, who created heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and the things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are therein, that there shall be time no longer.

 

It was used memorably in Philippa Pearce's fine children's book Tom's Midnight Garden.

 

This is a church I seem to revisit every five years or so, and I'm always left wondering why I don't come back more often. After the longest winter I can remember, and a good five months since my previous church exploring bike ride, I set off from Bury St Edmunds on a bright, cold Saturday morning, and Great Saxham was my first port of call.

 

Nothing much had changed. A large oak tree had fallen near to the fence of the park in a recent storm, but otherwise it was exactly as I remembered. It is always reassuring to cycle off into rural Suffolk to find that England has not entirely succumbed to the 21st Century.

 

But Suffolk has changed in the thirty-odd years I've been living here. There is hardly a dairy farm left, and not a single cattle market survives in the county. Ipswich, Lowestoft, Bury, and even the smaller places, are ringed by out-of-town shopping experiences, and the drifts of jerry-built houses wash against the edges of nearly every village. But the countryside has always been in a state of perpetually change, a constant metamorphosis, and often a painful one. I had been struck by this before while cycling across this parish, and the memory added a frisson to the experience of coming back.

 

For many modern historians, the 19th Century finished on August 4th 1914, and you can see their point. That was the day that the First World War began, and the England that would emerge from the mud, blood and chaos would be quite different. A new spirit was abroad, and rural areas left behind their previous patterns of ownership and employment that were little more than feudalism. Suffolk would never be the same again.

 

No more the Big House, no more the farm worker going cap in hand to the hiring fair, or the terrible grind to keep at bay the horrors of the workhouse. I think of Leonard, remembering the pre-war days in Ronald Blythe’s Akenfield, that passionate account of a 20th century Suffolk village, Charsfield: I want to say this simply as a fact, that Suffolk people in my day were worked to death. It literally happened. It is not a figure of speech. I was worked mercilessly. I am not complaining about it. It is what happened to me. But the men coming home from Flanders would demand a living wage. The new world would not bring comfort and democracy overnight, of course, and there are many parts of Suffolk where poverty and patronage survive even today, to a greater or lesser extent, but the old world order had come to an end. The Age of Empires was over, and the Age of Anxiety was beginning.

 

The English have a love-hate relationship with the countryside. As Carol Twinch argues in Tithe Wars, it is only actually possible for British agriculture to be fully profitable in war time. In time of peace, only government intervention can sustain it in its familiar forms. Here, at the beginning of the 21st century, British farmers are still demanding levels of subsidy similar to that asked for by the mining industry in the 1980s. With the UK's exit from the European Union looming, the answer from the state is ultimately likely to be the same. British and European agriculture are still supported by policies and subsidies that were designed to prevent the widespread shortages that followed the Second World War. They are half a century out of date, and are unsustainable, and must eventually come to an end.

 

But still sometimes in Suffolk, you find yourself among surroundings that still speak of that pre-WWI feudal time. Indeed, there are places where it doesn’t take much of a leap of the imagination to believe that the 20th century hasn’t happened. Great Saxham is one such place.

 

You travel out of Bury westwards, past wealthy Westley and fat, comfortable Little Saxham with its gorgeous round-towered church. The roads narrow, and after another mile or so you turn up through a straight lane of rural council houses and bungalows. At the top of the lane, there is a gateway. It is probably late 19th century, but seems as archaic as if it was a survival of the Roman occupation. The gate has gone, but the solid stone posts that tower over the road narrow it, so that only one car can pass in each direction. It is the former main entrance to Saxham Hall, and beyond the gate you enter the park, cap in hand perhaps.

 

Looking back, you can see now that the lane behind you is the former private drive to the Big House, obviously bought and built on by the local authority in the 1960s. It is easy to imagine it as it had once been.

 

Beyond the gate is another world. The narrowed road skirts the park in a wide arc, with woods off to the right. Sheep turn to look once, then resumed their grazing. About a mile beyond the gate, there is a cluster of 19th century estate buildings, and among them, slightly set back from the road beyond an unusually high wall, was St Andrew.

 

There was a lot of money here in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, so that you might even think it a Victorian building in local materials. But there is rather more to it than that. Farm buildings sit immediately against the graveyard, only yards from the church. When Mortlock came this way, he found chickens pottering about among the graves, and like me you may experience the unnervingly close neighing of a horse in the stables across from the porch.

 

The great restoration of this church was at a most unusual date, 1798, fully fifty years before the great wave of sacramentalism rolled out of Oxford and swept across the Church of England. Because of this, it appears rather plain, although quite in keeping with its Perpendicular origins - no attempt was made to introduce the popular mock-classical features of the day. The patron of the parish at the time was Thomas Mills, more familiar from his ancestors at Framlingham than here. There was another makeover in the 1820s.

 

I've always found this church open, and so it should be, for it has a great treasure which cannot be stolen, but might easily be vandalised if the church was kept locked (I wish that someone would explain this to the churchwardens at Nowton). The careful restoration preserved the Norman doorways and 15th century font, and the church would be indistinguishable from hundreds of other neat, clean 19th century refurbishments if it were not for the fact that it contains some most unusual glass. It was collected by Thomas Mills' son, William, and fills the east and west windows. It is mostly 17th century (you can see a date on one piece) and much of it is Swiss in origin. As at Nowton, it probably came from continental monasteries.

 

The best is probably the small scale collection in the west window. This includes figures of St Mary Magdalene, St John the Baptist and the Blessed Virgin, as well as scenes of the Annunciation, the Coronation of the Queen of Heaven, the Vision of St John, and much more. The work in the east window is on a larger scale, some of it Flemish in origin.

 

There are several simple and tasteful Mills memorials - but the Mills family was not the first famous dynasty to hold the Hall here. Back in the 16th and 17th centuries, it was the home of the Eldred family, famous explorers and circumnavigators of the globe. John Eldred died in 1632, and has one wall-mounted bust memorial on the south sanctuary wall, as well as a figure brass reset in the chancel floor from a lost table tomb. Both are gloriously flamboyant, and might seem quite out of kilter with that time, on the eve of the long Puritan night. Compare them, for instance, with the Boggas memorial at Flowton, barely ten years later. But, although the bust is of an elderly Elizabethan, I think that there is a 17th Century knowingness about them. The inscription beneath the bust reads in part The Holy Land so called I have seene and in the land of Babilone have bene, but in thy land where glorious saints doe live my soule doth crave of Christ a room to give - curiously, the carver missed out the S in Christ, and had to add it in above. It might have been done in a hurry, but perhaps it is rather a Puritan sentiment after all, don't you think?

 

The brass has little shields with merchant ships on, one scurrying between cliffs and featuring a sea monster. The inscription here is more reflective, asking for our tolerance: Might all my travells mee excuse for being deade, and lying here, for, as it concludes, but riches can noe ransome buy nor travells passe the destiny.

 

The First World War memorial remembers names of men who were estate workers here. And, after all, here is the English Church as it was on the eve of the First World War, triumphant, apparently eternal, at the very heart of the Age of Empires. Now, it is only to be found in backwaters like this, and the very fact that they are backwaters tells us that, really, it has not survived at all.

"All of a sudden, someone threw me in front of this rock and roll band. And I decided then and there that was it. I never wanted to do anything else."

 

~ Janis Joplin

 

Janis Joplin ~ Live in Frankfurt, Germany (RARE Concert Footage)

 

SightNSoundNH Published on 6 Aug 2013

youtu.be/5NuZxUxHN0o

Stunning Mother and Child painting by a Filipino priest, Fr. Armand Tangi ...lest we forget whose birthday it is we are celebrating...so thus the quotation above from the book of Proverbs...

 

I wish you all the peace in the promise fulfilled in our redemption; and in the arms of the Blessed Mother... know in you only - that which is true..that which is good..and that which is beautiful...

 

A blessed Christmas to all.

~aliceinthepoetsheartland

Writing is hard for every last one of us… Coal mining is harder. Do you think miners stand around all day talking about how hard it is to mine for coal? They do not. They simply dig. -Cheryl Strayed

Quotation Frankfurt Westend subway station for the installation of security turnstiles at Frankfurt Westend subway station.

 

Material :

5 x flower stem 0,07€ 0,35€

10 x 1x3 plates 0,07€ 0,70€

10 x 1x1 brick 0,07€ 0,70€

10 x 1x1 tile 0,05€ 0,50€

5 x cheese slope 0,06€ 0,30€

5 x 1x1 brick modified 0,11€ 0,55€

 

Working time:

Purchase, assembly, installation

25 min x 1,00€ 25,00€

Total 28,10€

 

If you would like to place an order please contact me at @steinchenwunder on the discord platform.

  

This is my third contribution for Iron forge 2025 round 3

The Gateway to the Roofless Chapel can be seen in the background. The chapel was designed by Philip Johnson.

20161021-img226-Edit.jpg

This is the finished product for the first project in my typography class. The assignment was the take the phrase "Just because you can does not mean that you should" and illustrate it using the text and minimal illustration. Admittedly, I went a little overboard with illustration, but I'm happy with the outcome.

My own favorite shot, hehehehe!

San Lorenzo Parish,

Balagtas, Bulacan

Nice collection of quote to describe what your feel.

You can download and share image about inspirational love quotation for you .

The following are some of the best quotes from famous people :

you make another resolution to avoid the BS story you tell yourself to derail your goal. This year...

 

picquotes.biz/inspirational-love-quotation-for-you-10018....

When I think back on these times and the dreams we left behind

Faith Hill - There You'll Be [Official Music Video]

 

HDClipsMusic Published on Jun 2, 2013

youtu.be/BwyWmqV_RJc

When I think back on these times and the dreams we left behind

I'll be glad cause I was blessed to get to have you in my life

When I look back on these days I'll look and see your face

You're right there for me

 

In my dreams I'll always see you soul above the sky

In my heart therell always be a place for you for all my life

I'll keep a part of you with me

And everywhere I am there you'll be

And everywhere I am there you'll be

 

Well you showed me how it feels to feel the sky within my reach

And I always will remember all the strength you gave to me

Your love made me make it through ooh I owe so much to you

You're right there for me

 

In my dreams I'll always see you soul above the sky

In my heart there'll always be a place for you for all my life

I'll keep a part of you with me

And everywhere I am there you'll be

 

Cause I always saw in you my light my strength

And I want to thank you now for all the ways

You're right there for me

(you're right there for me)

You're right there for me

Always..

 

In my dreams I'll always see you soul above the sky

In my heart there'll always be a place for you for all my life

I'll keep a part of you with me

And everywhere I am there you'll be

And everywhere I am there you'll be

There you'll be

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=BwyWmqV_RJc

 

Designer: Red Guards Congress of Colleges and Universities in the Capital (首都大专院校红代会), Red Artist Soldiers of the Dongfanghong Commune of Beijing Film Academy (北京电影学院东方红公社红画兵)

1967, December

Quotation from Chairman Mao: What is the real iron wall?

Mao zhuxi yulu: Zhenzhengde tongqiang tiebe shi shenmo? (毛主席语录: 真正的铜墙铁壁是什麽?)

 

Call nr.: BG E3/762 (IISH collection)

 

The Mao quotation from January 1934 is in the Little Red Book, in the chapter on People's War. The real iron wall is "the masses" supporting the revolution.

The brownish streaks on this poster are discoloration caused by Scotch tape.

 

More? See: chineseposters.net

Yes, there are benefits to be perpetually disorganized!

It's time to spread some harmony with original 'Peace quotation' you might come up with your very own philosophy!

 

“Money can’t buy you life” - Bob Marley

for more Bob Marley Quotes visit - engtuto.com/bob-marley-quotes/

Digital collage with elements from Rebecca McMeen and Tangie Baxter.

Without leaps of imagination, or dreaming, we lose the excitement of possibilities. Dreaming, after all, is a form of planning. -Gloria Steinem

John F Kennedy quotation, 26 February 1962.

 

*JFK advises Joe Biden to allow Assange to publish the truth. Although if anyone reads Patrick J. Sloyan's "The Politicis of Deception: JFK's Secret Decisions on Vietnam, Civil Rights and Cuba," they might feel the late president's words and advice to be a little hypocritical.

 

On Monday 20 May 2024, Julian Assange attended the Royal Courts of Justice in central London to face a crucial appeal hearing against his extradition to the United States where he faces up to 175 years in prison for the crime of reporting the truth about US government crimes, particularly war crimes during Washington's so-called war on terror. The two judges did not appear to be convinced by United States assurances that Assange would be allowed First Amendment protections nor assurances that he would not face discrimination as a non-US citizen, and he was granted leave to appeal the extradition.

 

truthout.org/articles/in-a-victory-for-assange-and-first-...

 

After the hearing Assange was taken back to Belmarsh prison in South East London, sometimes referred to as " "Britain's Guantanamo Bay." He has been held there since April 2019.

 

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Please follow me on Instagram at

 

www.instagram.com/alisdarehickson/

 

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A creative commons PHOTO LICENSE for COMMERCIAL USE for this photo is AVAILABLE for over sixty NGOs and socialist or progressive publications which are listed on the link below

 

Although this image is being posted on an attribution noncommercial share alike basis CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 DEED, the following organisations and publications listed on the link below are also welcome to reproduce it even if it is for commercial purposes. However please publish the image on the same attribution noncommercial share alike basis. For more info or if any other organisation, person or publication wishes to publish this photo on a commercial basis please email me at alisdare@gmail.com.

 

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This is the tattoo I am going to do when i turn 20, in 5 months.

    

Excellent collection of quotation expressing your feeling.

You are allowed to download pictures for free about happiness quotations .

The following are some of the best quotes from famous people :

New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick was in his usual, ahem, happy mood when talking with...

 

picquotes.biz/happiness-quotations-9747.html

The quotation on the poster is from the broadcaster Peter Clayton (1927-91), while presenting his Sounds of Jazz radio show sometime in the mid 1970s; speaking of pianist, band leader and composer Count Basie (1904-84), Clayton described his legendary economy of playing with the phrase 'He never played one note when none would do'- a lesson for most musicians, and a nice summing up of how we like our typography.

 

The wood type chosen for this particular print was chosen for its similarity to the legendary Blue Note label's typography. This two-colour poster was printed by hand on Naturalis Soft White Matt 120gsm paper, on our FAG Control 525 proofing press at our workshop in London, and was signed and numbered by the artists in a total edition of 100.

 

This item, as well as the others in this set, are available from our eBay store- stores.shop.ebay.co.uk/Hand-and-Eye-Letterpress

A greeting card featuring a quote from author William Goldman.

 

"Love is many things, none of them logical.

 

Available at www.starsandstillness.etsy.com

100 Drawings #48

This is the one I am happy with - to celebrate a friend's wedding.

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