Sayonara, Monsignor!

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Herbert James Draper - “Lament for Icarus” (1898).
[via kanparoos]
Permalink thefindesiecle:

John William Waterhouse - Hylas and the Nymphs Study - 1896 - Chalk on Paper - Private Collection.
[studyincontrasts]
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lostintherenaissance:

thehermitage:

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Frozen in Time 
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Soldadera By Agustín Casasola, 1910s
Soldaderas were female soldiers who went into combat alongside men during the Mexican Revolution, which initially broke out in opposition to the conservative Díaz regime. The term comes from the Spanish word soldada which denotes a payment made to the person who provided for a soldier’s well being.   The majority of these women led ordinary lives, but took up arms during the war to fight for freedom. Among the soldaderas, Dolores Jiménez y Muro, Margarita Neri, and Hermila Galindo are often considered heroines in contemporary Mexico.
Today, the term La Adelita is used with pride among Mexican women. La Adelita was the title of a Corrido (folk ballad) about a soldadera named “Adelita”, and became one of the most beloved songs to come out of the Revolution.
However in most cases, the term soldaderas refers to the wives,  children, and relatives of the soldiers in the Mexican army. Soldaderas  were allowed to follow the army so soldiers would be less likely to desert.
(Article from Wikipedia)
(Photo from Poemas del río Wang : Slaves of the moment)
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Deus Ex : Human Revolution
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