View allAll Photos Tagged devil
Pen & Ink and watercolor
22"x30" - You can check out all of my artwork in greater detail at my website - www.panacheart.com. All of my artwork is available as limited edition prints in several sizes through my fine art printing company, www.bellevuefineart.com
The food pantry will be open to all students who struggle with food insecurity. They will have the opportunity to pick up non-perishable items in a shopping-style format.
Wikipedia says:
This beetle has been associated with the Devil since the Middle Ages, hence its common name. Other names include Devil's footman, Devil's coachman and Devil's steed. In Ireland the beetle is known as a deargadaol (literally Devil's beast) and it is said that the Devil assumes the form of this beetle to eat sinners. As with many supposed bringers of ill-luck superstition holds that people can turn the creature's powers to their own advantage and it is said that reapers used to enclose the body of a Devil's coach horse beetle in the handle of their scythes to improve their skill. The origins of these beliefs can perhaps be explained by the beetle's threatening appearance, and its habit of eating carrion.
We stopped at Devil's Elbow on the Big Piney River to see the 1923 Bridge and Elbow Inn, on Old Route 66 in Hooker Missouri. Bridge was being worked on but, we found a group of cats and Kittens to entertain us. Unfortunately the Elbow Inn was closed on Sundays.
The devils arrows or bolts are 3 standing stones which sit next to the A1 at Boroughbridge by the river Ure. It is thought that there were originally 5 stones. (Alternative Names: Three Grey Hounds, Three Sisters)
The stones are composed of millstone grit and it is suggested that they date from around 2,700 BC and was carried here from Knaresborough. The lightest one weighs over 25 tons and stands 5.5m high. The 2 tallest stones measure almost 7m high.
The name Devil's Arrows is thought to date from the end of the 17th century when people believed that walking 12 times around the stones anti-clockwise would raise the Devil!
There are several legends about the stones associated with the Devil. The most popular legend is that these stones are the Devil’s crossbow bolts. He was aiming for the Christian settlement of Aldborough from Howe Hill but fell short by a mile.
Another is of how the grooves were made in the stone, which were actually made by centuries of erosion. The story is that the Devil tried to hang his grandmother but she struggled so hard that the ropes cut into the stone. When she broke free he tied her to the next stone. This continued until he ran out of stones to hang her from.
Yet another legend tells of how a local Chief of the Brigantes tribe held a meeting to discuss the merits of the new Christian religion over the existing, but dying out, Druid system.
The Devil arrived in disguise to try to sway the people back to the old Pagan religion, but someone spotted his cloven hooves which were melting the ground beneath him. After being found out, the Devil flew off in a rage, leaving pillars of molten rock behind.
---
www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=60
---
fabulousnorth.com/devils-arrows/
---------
Originally taken and posted for the GWUK group.
Guessed by LookaroundAnne
Now replaced with un-edited version
Along the Oregon coastline is a fascinating hole in the rock that fills with water, then empties enough that you can walk down inside the giant "bowl"
"Devil's Rejects"
7 panels each 18 x 24
Total size is 24 inches tall by 126 inches wide
mixed media on panel
2007
The place where the River Tamar enters Plymouth Sound on its way to the English Channel.
So-called because of the dangerous currents at this point
A plant found commonly in Alaska which closely resembles the Cow Parsnip. Both have broad leaves but Devil's Club develops berries in late summer while Cow Parsnip has white flowers. This plant will sink its teeth in if you grab hold. The prickly spines will embed themselves into the skin. A cousin of ginseng which is being researched as a treatment for blood sugar issues like diabetes. Beware of bears that love the berries. Oplopanax horridus