Girly Tumblr Themes
imremembering:

Big Ass Number Phones
[Etsy]

imremembering:

Big Ass Number Phones

[Etsy]

() 334 notes
vintagegal:

Elvis Presley, 1956

vintagegal:

Elvis Presley, 1956

() 662 notes
archaeology:

Gnawed Roman skeleton that inspired Sylvia Plath poem goes on display

The skeleton of a Roman woman and the bones of the mouse and shrew that gnawed her ankle in her coffin, inspiring one of Sylvia Plath’s most haunting poems, have gone on display.
Plath saw the massive stone sarcophagus and its contents soon after it was excavated in the 1950s, when she was a student at Cambridge.
Staff at the university’s Museum of Archaeology and Anthropologymounted the rodent bones on a piece of card – also on display again – and showed them in the coffin alongside the remains of the middle-aged woman, which is grimacing as if in pain.
The viewing prompted Plath’s 1957 poem All the Dead Dears, in which she describes “this antique museum-cased lady” and the “gimcrack” bones of the rodents “that battened for a day on her ankle-bone”, and fears that the “barnacle dead”, strangers or members of her family will drag her down and suck her life away. Six years later, the poet killed herself.
The sarcophagus, with its inner lead coffin, was one of a group of high-status burials discovered by chance by builders clearing land for a housing estate at Arbury, on the outskirts of Cambridge.

archaeology:

Gnawed Roman skeleton that inspired Sylvia Plath poem goes on display

The skeleton of a Roman woman and the bones of the mouse and shrew that gnawed her ankle in her coffin, inspiring one of Sylvia Plath’s most haunting poems, have gone on display.

Plath saw the massive stone sarcophagus and its contents soon after it was excavated in the 1950s, when she was a student at Cambridge.

Staff at the university’s Museum of Archaeology and Anthropologymounted the rodent bones on a piece of card – also on display again – and showed them in the coffin alongside the remains of the middle-aged woman, which is grimacing as if in pain.

The viewing prompted Plath’s 1957 poem All the Dead Dears, in which she describes “this antique museum-cased lady” and the “gimcrack” bones of the rodents “that battened for a day on her ankle-bone”, and fears that the “barnacle dead”, strangers or members of her family will drag her down and suck her life away. Six years later, the poet killed herself.

The sarcophagus, with its inner lead coffin, was one of a group of high-status burials discovered by chance by builders clearing land for a housing estate at Arbury, on the outskirts of Cambridge.

() 151 notes

vintagegal:

Marilyn Monroe photographed by Jock Carroll 1952

() 707 notes
theniftyfifties:

Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller

theniftyfifties:

Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller

() 3,071 notes

Max Schreck, Testaufnahme für Nosferatu - Eine Symphonie des Grauens

Max Schreck, Testaufnahme für Nosferatu - Eine Symphonie des Grauens

(via vintagegal)

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vintagegal:

 Marilyn Monroe photographed by Sam Shaw (1957)

vintagegal:

 Marilyn Monroe photographed by Sam Shaw (1957)

() 287 notes

theniftyfifties:

Marilyn Monroe powders herself in ‘The Prince and The Showgirl’, 1957 - gif

(Source: alwaysmarilynmonroe)

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