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EN EREBOS PHOS

do i frighten you? do you want me to? 🦇

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Repost from Valerie divů
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Max Slevogt Frau Aventuire 1894
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Die Lorelei, Albert Ludovici Sr.
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John Everett Millais Three Sword Hilts
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Otto Seitz - The Black Kitchen of Death illustration from Jugend #24, 1896
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František Kozics - Nacht im Moor (Night in the Bog) illustration from Jugend #15, 1896
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Paul Rieth - Phantasmagorie illustration from Jugend #35, 1899
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The instant is the reciprocal and contradictory envelopment of the before by the after. One is still what one is going to cease to be and already what one is going to become. One lives one’s death, one dies one’s life. One feels oneself to be one’s own self and another; the eternal is present in an atom of duration. In the midst of the fullest life, one has a foreboding that one will merely survive; one is afraid of the future. It is the time of anguish and of heroism, of pleasure and destruction. An instant is sufficient to destroy, to enjoy, to kill, to be killed, to make one’s fortune at the turn of a card. Jean-Paul Sartre, tr. Bernard Frechtman, “Saint Genet: Actor and Martyr”
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“The dead rise, the day of judgement calls them to pain and pleasure, we both care about nothing, we lie quietly” Adolf Münzer - Lyrical Intermezzo 32 from Jugend #50, 1899
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John Franklin - The Plague Pit, 1841 illustration for W. H. Ainsworth’s ‘Old St. Paul’s: A Tale of the Plague and the Fire’ (London: Parry, Blenkharn & Co., 1847)
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John Franklin (19th century) - The Dance of Death, 1841 illustration for W. H. Ainsworth’s ‘Old St. Paul’s: A Tale of the Plague and the Fire’ (London: Parry, Blenkharn & Co., 1847)
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