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moodboardmix · 2 years
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Wall House, Ojai, Ventura County, California, United States,
Johnson Fain Architects,
Photo courtesy of the firm.
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sheltiechicago · 8 months
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Johnson Fain completes curvilinear First Americans Museum after decades of work
Curved buildings and a massive earthen mound feature at a museum in Oklahoma that was designed by architecture studio Johnson Fain over two decades ago and is finally complete.
The First Americans Museum (FAM) aims to educate the public on the cultures and histories of the 39 Native American tribes that exist in Oklahoma today. It is located in the state's capital, Oklahoma City.
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Mitt Romney
* * * *
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
January 25, 2024
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
JAN 26, 2024
Today a report from the Bureau of Economic Analysis showed strong economic growth of 3.3% in the U.S. in the fourth quarter of 2023, setting growth for the year at 3.1% (by comparison, in the first three years of Trump’s term, before the pandemic, growth was 2.5%). A year ago, economists projected that the U.S. would have a recession in 2023, and forecast growth of 0.2%. 
Meanwhile, unemployment remains low, wages are high, and inflation is receding. As Gabriel T. Rubin put it in the Wall Street Journal today, “The final three months of the year looked a lot like the soft landing Fed officials are seeking to achieve.” 
There is a major political story behind this impressive economic one. Since 1981, lawmakers have insisted that cutting taxes, regulation, and the social safety net would create much faster and more efficient growth than was possible under the system in place between 1933 and 1981.
In the earlier era, lawmakers regulated business, imposed progressive taxes, and supported workers to make sure that ordinary Americans had the resources to fuel the economy through their desire for homes, consumer goods, and so on. But with the election of Republican president Ronald Reagan, lawmakers claimed that concentrating wealth on the “supply side” of the economy would enable wealthy investors and businessmen to manage the economy more efficiently than was possible when the government meddled, and the resulting economic growth would make the entire country more prosperous. 
The problem was that this system never produced the economic boom it promised. Instead, it moved money dramatically upward and hollowed out the American middle class while leaving poorer Americans significantly worse off. 
When they took office, President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris rejected “supply side” economics and vowed to restore buying power to the demand side of the economy: ordinary Americans. They invested in manufacturing, infrastructure, small businesses, and workers’ rights. And now, after years in which pundits said their policies would never work, the numbers are in. The U.S. economy is very strong indeed, and at least some voters who have backed Republicans for a generation are noticing, as United Auto Workers president Shawn Fain made clear yesterday when the union made a strong and early endorsement of President Biden.  
So here is the political story: Republicans cannot run for office in 2024 by attacking the economy, although Trump has tested that message by saying the economy is “so fragile” and “running off the fumes” of his administration and that it will soon crash. He has promised to cut taxes again, which is not likely to impress many voters these days. Media stories are beginning to reflect the reality of the economy, and people are starting to realize that it is strong.
At the same time, the Republicans are in huge trouble over their overturning of the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision recognizing the constitutional right to abortion. A poll taken in June 2023, a year after the Supreme Court overturned Roe, showed that 69% of Americans want to see Roe reinstated. But, to appeal to their base, Republican leaders are backing more, rather than less, extreme measures: a federal prohibition of abortion. 
So the MAGA Republicans, who back Trump, need an election issue. They are trying to turn the migration influx at the southern border into an issue that can win for them in November. In December 2023, extremist House Republicans refused to pass a supplementary funding bill that is crucial to Ukraine’s effort to resist Russia’s 2022 invasion, insisting that the “border crisis” must be attended to first, although they refused to participate in the negotiations that Biden and senators promptly began.
Then, after news hit that the negotiators were close to a deal, House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) and Fox News Channel personality Laura Ingraham told the television audience that they had both spoken to Trump and he opposed a deal. Negotiations continued, and last night, journalists reported that Trump was pressuring Republican lawmakers to reject any deal because he wants to run on the issue of immigration and “doesn’t want Biden to have a victory.” 
Today, Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT) told CNN’s Manu Raju that “the fact that he would communicate to Republican senators and congresspeople that he doesn’t want us to solve the border problem because he wants to blame Biden for it is really appalling.” Attacking Romney on social media, Trump said: "[W]e need a Strong, Powerful, and essentially 'PERFECT' Border and, unless we get that, we are better off not making a Deal, even if that pushes our Country to temporarily 'close up' for a while, because it will end up closing anyway with the unsustainable Invasion that is currently taking place,” which he called “A DEATH WISH for the U.S.A.!...” 
Now, after insisting the border issue must be addressed and riling up their base to believe it is the biggest crisis the U.S. faces, MAGA Republicans are in the position of having to refuse to address the problem. So they are escalating their rhetoric, claiming that the bipartisan deal to address the border is not good enough. 
That dilemma is especially clear in Texas, where voters are very angry over reproductive rights in the face of Texas’s draconian laws, which have produced high-profile cases in which white suburban women—a key voting demographic—have been forced to leave the state to obtain abortions to protect their health. Texas governor Greg Abbott is also searching for a viable political issue since his signature policy, school vouchers, failed late last year. According to Patrick Svitek of the Texas Tribune, money has been pouring into the Texas primaries as Abbott and Texas attorney general Ken Paxton try “to unseat House Republicans who crossed them.” 
When the Supreme Court on Monday permitted the federal government to cut razor wire that was blocking federal agents from reaching parts of the border, including the crossing where three migrants died last week, MAGA Republicans urged Texas to “ignore” the ruling (although it came from a right-wing court), and Abbott launched a war of words against the federal government over management of the border. 
In a construction that appeared to echo Civil War–era declarations of secession, Abbott asserted Texas’s “constitutional authority to defend and protect itself.”
Twenty-five Republican governors have issued a joint statement supporting “Texas’ constitutional right to self-defense.” Their statement accuses Biden of attacking Texas, using the right-wing talking points that the administration is "refusing to enforce immigration laws already on the books" and leaving the country "completely vulnerable to unprecedented illegal immigration pouring across the Southern border."
House speaker Johnson has also posted: “I stand with Governor Abbott. The House will do everything in its power to back him up. The next step: holding Secretary Mayorkas accountable.” (Johnson refers here to the impeachment effort against Homeland Security secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in which the Republicans wrote articles of impeachment before holding any hearings.) Trump called for “all willing States to deploy their [national] guards to Texas.”
But Paxton (whose trial on charges of securities fraud is set to start in April), asserted this right in court last September, and Abbott suggested today that his moves are part of an attempt to create a record for a court case challenging the long-standing precedent that the federal government, not the states, has jurisdiction over border issues. 
Observers worry that Texas’s stance is a modern version of the secession of the American South from the Union in the months before the Civil War, and perhaps in one way, it is. In the 1850s, elite southerners’ management of the South’s economy had thrown huge numbers of poor white southerners off their land and enabled a few men to amass huge wealth and power. As dispossessed white men became restive against the economic policies of human enslavement, southern lawmakers shored up their own slipping popularity by warning of the dangers of federal government meddling in their business. 
Here’s another way in which that era might inform our own. In the 1860s, southern leaders’ posturing took on a momentum of its own, propelling fire-eating southerners into a war. As MAGA Republicans are talking tonight about fighting the federal government and as Trump calls for “all willing States to deploy their guards to Texas,” I think of those elite southerners in 1861 for whom threatening war was all a rhetorical game. 
Meanwhile, Ukraine is running out of ammunition.
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
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mysticalspiders · 2 months
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"Fain am I to stagger to this emprise under the weightiest words of the dictionary. And here be it said, that whenever it has been convenient to consult one in the course of these dissertations, I have invariably used a huge quarto edition of Johnson, expressly purchased for that purpose; because that famous lexicographer’s uncommon personal bulk more fitted him to compile a lexicon to be used by a whale author like me."
Ishmael opening up thesaurus.com to find just the right whale word
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kp777 · 7 months
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By Jake Johnson
Common Dreams
Sept. 26, 2023
"You deserve what you've earned, and you've earned a hell of a lot more than you're getting paid now," President Joe Biden told Michigan autoworkers.
Joe Biden on Tuesday became the first sitting U.S. president to join striking workers on a picket line, rallying with United Auto Workers members outside of a General Motors plant in Belleville, Michigan as they fight for a fair contract.
"You saved the automobile industry back in 2008," Biden said in brief remarks to the Michigan workers. "You made a lot of sacrifices, you gave up a lot, and the companies were in trouble. But now they're doing incredibly well. You should be doing incredibly well, too."
"Wall Street didn't build the country, the middle class built the country," the president said. "And unions built the middle class. So let's keep going. You deserve what you've earned, and you've earned a hell of a lot more than you're getting paid now."
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The president's visit to the picket line comes days after the UAW expanded its strikes to every General Motors and Stellantis parts distribution facility in the U.S., accusing the two companies of refusing to seriously engage with union negotiators.
More than 18,000 autoworkers in 21 states are currently on strike against General Motors, Ford, and Stellantis, pushing the so-called Big Three automakers to deliver significant pay and benefit improvements after years of surging profits and declining real wages. Survey data released Monday shows that public support for the strikes is growing, with 62% of likely U.S. voters—regardless of party affiliation—backing the walkouts.
When asked by a reporter, Biden said he supports a 40% wage increase for UAW workers.
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Labor historians say they're not aware of any other case of a sitting U.S. president rallying with striking workers in this way.
"This is genuinely new—I don't think it's ever happened before, a president on a picket line," Nelson Lichtenstein, a labor historian at the University of California, Santa Barbara, told veteran labor journalist Steven Greenhouse on Tuesday. "Candidates do it frequently and prominent senators, but not a president."
UAW president Shawn Fain, who accompanied Biden at the Belleville picket line, thanked Biden for "being a part of this fight."
"We know the president will do right by the working class," said Fain, "and when we do right by the working class, you can leave the rest to us, because we're going to take care of this business."
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(Photo: Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images)
Biden's visited striking autoworkers a day before former President Donald Trump—the GOP's 2024 presidential frontrunner—is scheduled to speak to hundreds of workers at Drake Enterprises, a nonunion auto parts supplier in Clinton Township, Michigan.
Morris Pearl, chair of the Patriotic Millionaires, said in a statement that "the historic significance of President Biden's decision to join striking workers on the picket line cannot be understated."
"Instead of taking on the role of mediator—and falling victim to both-sides-ism in the process—Biden is standing unequivocally with workers who have been denied a share in the prosperity of the Big Three automakers," said Pearl.
"Biden's fight on behalf of workers must not end here," Pearl added. "To ensure his support is more than symbolic, he must use this historic moment to ensure that workers in all industries share in growing prosperity with their employers. While this is an important step, there remains significant work to do. We look forward to seeing which tangible steps President Biden takes to further support American workers."
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First Americans Museum Embraces Nature, Exposes Culture, Honors History Read more: Link in bio! Oklahoma Building by Johnson Fain Widely Awarded for Expressing Mission Through Design. Twenty-five years in the making, First Americans Museum (FAM) in Oklahoma City is a testament to mission and perseverance. It was created to honor the 39 tribes in Oklahoma today, reflecting their history through design metaphors of nature’s elements of earth, wind, water, and fire. Los Angeles architecture firm Johnson Fain, along with associated Oklahoma City firm Hornbeek Blatt and New York City-based landscape architect Hargreaves Jones, created a destination representing FAM’s mission to educate the public about the cultures, diversity, history, contributions, and resilience of Oklahoma’s First American Nations… Photography: Scott McDonald; McNeese Studios; Mel Willis #usa #museum #oklahoma #архитектура www.amazingarchitecture.com ✔ A collection of the best contemporary architecture to inspire you. #design #architecture #amazingarchitecture #architect #arquitectura #luxury #realestate #life #cute #architettura #interiordesign #photooftheday #love #travel #construction #furniture #instagood #fashion #beautiful #archilovers #home #house ‎#amazing #picoftheday #architecturephotography ‎#معماری (at First Americans Museum) https://www.instagram.com/p/CoGQwVoMzyZ/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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Allyn Ann McLerie and Doris Day in Calamity Jane (David Butler, 1953) Cast: Doris Day, Howard Keel, Allyn Ann McLerie, Philip Carey, Dick Wesson, Paul Harvey, Chubby Johnson, Gale Robbins. Screenplay: James O'Hanlon. Cinematography: Wilfrid M. Cline. Art direction: John Beckman. Film editing: Irene Morra. Songs: Sammy Fain, Paul Francis Webster. Doris Day had real cinematic presence, good comedy timing, and one of the sweetest singing voices of any star, with an ability to put a song over. I wish that she had been cast as Annie Oakley in Annie Get Your Gun (George Sidney, 1950) instead of the bumptious, brassy Betty Hutton, or as Nellie Forbush in South Pacific (Joshua Logan, 1958) instead of the blandly perky Mitzi Gaynor. But instead we have a string of somewhat undistinguished Warner Bros. musicals, culminating in Calamity Jane, which is an almost unabashed rip-off of Annie Get Your Gun, down to the casting of Howard Keel, who was Frank Butler in the 1950 film. Keel as Wild Bill Hickok and Day as Jane even get an insult-trading duet, "I Can Do Without You," that recalls "Anything You Can Do, I Can Do Better" from the Irving Berlin musical. The Sammy Fain-Paul Francis Webster song score for Calamity Jane is of course nowhere near the equal of Berlin's, with only the Oscar-winning "Secret Love" lingering in anyone's memory, and that perhaps mostly because it has been adopted as a kind of LGBTQ anthem. The film itself has attracted a lot of attention because of its supposed queerness: It has a drag number, performed by Dick Wesson as the hapless Easterner who has been hired as a performer because his name, Francis, made the saloon owner think he was a woman, but most of the comment has been about the relationship between Jane and Katie Brown (Allyn Ann McLerie), who set up house together in a montage to the tune of "A Woman's Touch." Subtext aside, the movie is lively and energetic, and Day works her ass off in the role. Still, if you want a taste of what could have been, seek out the recording of Annie Get Your Gun that Day made with Robert Goulet as Hickok.
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lindajenni · 2 months
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feb 27
pruned to yield fruit "look, for three years I have come seeking fruit on this fig tree and find none.  cut it down; why does it use up the ground?'  but He answered and said to Him, ‘Sir, let it alone this year also, until I dig around it and fertilize it.  and if it bears fruit, well.  but if not, after that you can cut it down.'" luke 13:7-9 do you sometimes weary of all the trials and temptations that afflict your walk with the Lord?  perhaps we even esteem Him not faithful to finish the work He has begun in us.  i tell you NO, but He is a masterful gardener and knows what is best. let me tell you a little story. ------- a child of God was dazed by the variety of afflictions which seemed to make her their target.  walking past a vineyard in the rich autumnal glow she noticed the untrimmed appearance and the luxuriant wealth of leaves on the vines, that the ground was given over to a tangle of weeds and grass, and that the whole place looked utterly uncared for.  as she pondered, the Heavenly Gardener whispered so precious a message that she would fain pass it on: “my dear child, are you wondering at the sequence of trials in your life?  behold that vineyard and learn of it.  the gardener ceases to prune, to trim, to harrow, or to pluck the ripe fruit only when he expects nothing more from the vine during that season.  it is left to itself, because the season of fruit is past and further effort for the present would yield no profit.  comparative uselessness is the condition of freedom from suffering.  do you then wish me to cease pruning your life?  shall I leave you alone?”  and the comforted heart cried, “NO!” — homera homer-dixon ------- it is the branch that bears the fruit,that feels the knife,to prune it for a larger growth, a fuller life. though every budding twig be lopped, and every graceof swaying tendril, springing leaf, be lost a space. o thou whose life of joy seems reft, of beauty shorn;whose aspirations lie in dust, all bruised and torn, rejoice, tho’ each desire, each dream, each hope of thineshall fall and fade; it is the hand of love divine that holds the knife, that cuts and breaks with tenderest touch,that thou, whose life has borne some fruit may’st now bear much. — annie johnson flint
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newsaljazeera · 8 months
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peacedtogether · 2 years
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Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: VINTAGE NANCY JOHNSON KNITS CROCHET BABYDOLL STYLE BLOUSE.
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multi-level-shipper · 2 years
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Here
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lucywrites02 · 2 years
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GOOD MORNING!! OR... NOON!!! I hope you're having a great day and enjoying your autumn in there. Here's a poem that somehow reminds me a lot of winter, and how our skin becomes sensitive and fragile when it's cold like that (I just woke up, my interpretations might be too odd). See u <3
Paradox
Georgia Douglas Johnson
I know you love me better, cold—
Strange as the pyramids of old,
Responselessly;
But I am frail, am spent and weak
With surging torrents that bespeak
A living fire!
So, like a veil, my poor disguise
Is draped to save me from your eyes’
Deep challenges.
Fain would I fling this robe aside
And from you, in your bosom hide
Eternally!
Alas!
You love me better cold,
Like frozen pyramids of old,
Unyieldingly!
Hello!!!! I hope you're having a great weekend 💖 We still have some snow on the ground (and I hope we will get more) so this poem is a mood
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atsoukalidis · 2 years
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“Paradox” by Georgia Douglas Johnson
“I know you love me better, cold—
Strange as the pyramids of old,
Responselessly;
But I am frail, am spent and weak
With surging torrents that bespeak
A living fire!
So, like a veil, my poor disguise
Is draped to save me from your eyes’
Deep challenges.
Fain would I fling this robe aside
And from you, in your bosom hide
Eternally!
Alas!
You love me better cold,
Like frozen pyramids of old,
Unyieldingly!”
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hadesthesewerrat · 3 years
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have I ever introduced y’all to my other BATIM OC that was made to be the soul of a background cartoon?
That’s Peggy Frances Evelyn Johnson.
A Finish musician, has autism but gets through life quite well.
A very gentle giant, she doesn’t have a lot of enemies.
*cough cough* major crush on Grant Cohen *cough*
No, she does not usually wear a maid dress, you can see what she wears in the second picture that I sketched while bored in class. [Appearance: She has quite the pale skin and typical white-ish blonde hair. It's very long- reaching down her entire back. It's often braided into one braid and lays on her shoulder. Her eyes are a mix of grey, green and blue. They tend to be the first thing noticed when looking at her. Another thing often noticed about her would be her lips, who have an oddly strong red color. Not too strong, but still doesn't look really look that natural.Peggy is pretty tall and seems to have an average figure. She is a very gentle giant.] [Anyway. She wears a green-ish blue dress that reaches just below her knees. It's short-sleeved and a little swirly. She also wears a dark grey blazer to that and has a red ribbon around the waist of her dress. She also has dark blue ballerina flats and white over-knees. To that, she wears white gloves. She also wears golden earrings and a necklace, given to her by her grandmother when she was a teen.]
Some nice facts:
-She can play guitar, violin, piano, double bass, banjo and harp
-She is a little scared of Sammy Lawrence but loves his songs, she often plays them in her free time
-Would love to learn how to write songs herself, but is too shy to ask
-She gets along with Allison Pendle very well, and used to get along with Susie Campbell too
-Absolutely adores Shawn Flynn's toys
-Seems to be disliked by Lacie Benton, Bertrum Piedmont, Norman Polk and Dorothy (I don't think her last name was ever mentioned)
-People that were nice to her too without really judging her based on behavior and speech problems were Helen, Wally Franks, Jack Fain and Grant Cohen
Character/Personality: She is a very nice, but a little bit shy person. Since she does have problems with speaking (she can speak, she just tends to mix up words and mumble some new letters in between, new words are hard to learn, especially with her disorder and her not speaking English as first language) she tends to let body language talk more.
Peggy is really determined and hard-working. Sure, she can fall out of line a little, especially with her disorder, but she is ready to get back up. That does lead to a bit of stubbornness though. Still, she is trying to be social, and tries to avoid being judged on her behavior, which is quite difficult in the 1930's/40's.
She has a gentle and loving nature, but that doesn't mean she can't get loud. She gets emotional quite fast, so you have to be a little patient. But through stubbornness and too much emotions, there is still a cheery side that loves to learn new things, since she is almost always up for a challenge.
She would love to meet y’all.
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farkhoda · 5 years
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Next part of unnamed story
For @elizadoolittlethings
- You write, mister Jonson. If you write again, then you better. Hope so.
- It's just a trifle, earl. I was just thinking. ... I thought, - Jonson repeated in some strange voice, taking the sheet from the earl. And Pembroke said, pleased that Johnson wrote the poem again:
- I'm so glad you feel better! Maybe you can even see something. From what I sketched before, - said earl of Pembroke happily. He wrote poems and always asked Johnson to edit them. However, Pembroke was no different with his special talent, and even Jonson could not really do anything with this verse. But for the love of his friend, Jonson meekly edited his texts, corrected grammatical errors and the most incorrectly composed phrases, sometimes replaced a few words, in an attempt to correct the situation. Pembroke tried to write in the style of his uncle, Great Phoenix, but Phoenix didn’t work out of him. Sometimes he imitated his mother’s style, but these attempts were mercilessly suppressed by Jonson. It was impossible to translate psalms and write religious poems for a cheerful earl at all. With sonnets, things were a little better. Pembroke persistently tried to imitate his uncle, but without success. Sonnets he began to write recently, having started a correspondence in verse with Lady Mary Wroth, his another cousin, the daughter of his mother's younger brother. Lady Mary Wroth also wrote sonnets, and now she was working on a novel, a real novel in prose, “Urania”, naturally with the help of Jonson, who agreed to help with the edit. In the morning, Lady Mary sent the next message to the count, as always from Pamphilia to Amphilanthus, as she called them in their correspondence.
- Mister Jonson, lady Wroth sent me this sonnet this morning. Do not want to take a look?
- “I don’t think you will fall behind, earl, - Jonson agreed meekly, and the earl pulled a folded sheet of scented paper from behind his camisole cuff. Jonson winced as he turned the sheet. In a capricious handwriting that was too familiar to him, it was written:
Sonnet from Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
Love like a jugler, comes to play his prise,
    And all minds draw his wonders to admire,
    To see how cuningly hee, wanting eyes,
    Can yett deseave the best sight of desire:
  The wanton child, how hee can faine his fire
    So pretely, as none sees his disguise!
    How finely doe his tricks, while wee fooles hire
    The badge, and office of his tirannies,
 For in the end, such jugling hee doth make
    As hee our harts, in stead of eyes doth take
    For men can only by theyr slieghts abuse
 The sight with nimble, and delightful skill;
    Butt if hee play, his gaine is our lost will:
    Yett childlike, wee can nott his sports refuse.
 -Do you like it, mister Jonson, what do you say? – earl asked impatiently.
-Fair sex of lady Wroth does not allow me to fully express all my thoughts, -Johnson answered evasively, folding the paper. He did not like the poems of Lady Mary; he considered them characteristic works of a woman who suffered from underdeveloped love. It was obvious to Jonson that love was mainly from her side, and her “subject” graciously allowed her to love him, sometimes. Which was typical of the frivolous Pembroke, who was tired of women who were too much in love with him. Truly the earl was tied only to Jonson. Especially after the death of his father, whom he loved very much, much stronger than his mother. It was the father who introduced his beloved son to the "talented young man," who became his closest, rather even the only friend and mentor.
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“Urania” it is a  first known prose romance written by an English woman.
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libidomechanica · 5 years
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Untitled (“And, which every sin”)
And, which every  sin And wisdom. content  you? Of Green; but little cast, where  all faine: semed, -than that 
inbent eyes are for ever, 
as the quarters use,  Live to boy, you will  be; the motion mine 
Fanning friends he knew it.  or by the desert  sand. what disturbing shut, till 
the Lord, she will less quickly  girls in towering  his heaviest their pillow to  show his or tother  phone. The Kozacks, or, if 
ye will beauteous blaze,—and  the man wanting 
both of German, knew a  frown, he shrunk though he courage 
to tell you havent unlearneds  wings they sounds of books unwrinkled  piece of it. To 
end: to hate. A flower,  each redeeming none, not that  piped them then we seize “our 
destined prey, as Paris (‘ changing in their heard Heaven  I in duty with 
a full lips unrigged  and glory, should that purple  and dream the great distinguish  was cut him 
to th)e time,  time. Down  each, spirit doth lie: that 
grow are of being down. Of  those for life, that I  could so in my Soul. “By what  love at all to cherished, and  Pity fell on high to  sings so much intestined by  grief he bore down and Job, I  must need and rail, we touch, first pretext  held” of all sit on prime,’ 
and fill my heart. This Gama 
swamping Vulcan and Johnson and  Johnson; where sport he hope inside 
you: on you. For 
some sported with roses  an unwonted word which  man that one another stop  as the mob at last  mud, Blythe anger tary, Decreased  to me; now counteth  into his piping  and that might up to  the day I reach attackd  them, let me like, who caused. the  light our birds wand;  jove might no more: and emerald,  Jove-borne by one, passion  dear compeld my most, I shall sweet  kisse; each other were he met the 
hour, would speaks out-wrest; 
things that loudly sweetly quick to 
spring wave, just to  serve you open a perpetual 
dullness. Like was  strong as if to  gratify it, and in  our poor souls straight and  this legacy, and you, love,  the vale; and winter went  out of a corne, you knowest  then days, oh, below. To  the sun or married, ‘ wild nature, my lad, though number I 
still, you might send thereby, yet each around 
hery wild, became  as the Danubes  flown! Laid pause not yet might concern, to  brow, not decreed the  most, I should have much as I. 
Thats this want to keep 
your love, to her window 
veil I saw my lad, thoughts decay, 
cald it all noble sisters  did imprint that 
ancient to keep the 
Hielands in the  rest.  And well that we can  be bettering her booty  sought himself will be as  springs vnto him, called, she dead  despots; and walked with 
infant terrors, and dance or  two, and if I ask thee only,  his hoarie locks,’ and keep the  towsing at last shall  I though but took the fight praise 
in lost her home alike, by  dint of runningly to  the water drink of good; 
for being beams and  then told us all, that he  hent in the fought and  sage Hippolytus Leander is  therefore, a highest” but still 
hear you was and arts  worn our only way, pickd  out from dreamt of fear, indeed 
and floats up, bright, it went, curtain 
and as more them. Threate.
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