c4ught:

always reblog

c4ught:

always reblog

(Quelle: winnipegsummer, via a0ta0909)

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Books can be possessive, can’t they? You’re walking around in a bookstore and a certain one will jump out at you, like it had moved there on its own, just to get your attention. Sometimes what’s inside will change your life, but sometimes you don’t even have to read it. Sometimes it’s a comfort just to have a book around.
— Sarah Addison Allen  (via excessivebookshelf)

(via booklover)

291 Notes

snowhiteandthehuntsman:

THE MAGIC BEGINS - A Harry Potter Challenge » 5 - Favourite house/your house.

(via jorowlingdownahill)

2785 Notes

meganeronan:

somethingpsychotic:

propaedeuticist:

Meteorological Triptych - the only 2 photos (to date) of a tornado, rainbow and lightning bolt together.

we are now witnessing nature’s middle finger

i like the double rainbow in the top picture

(via watsonly)

27441 Notes

(Quelle: thenoblehare, via cateaclysmic)

211 Notes

You know what’s kind of beautiful?

timorleste:

In French, you don’t really say, “I miss you.”

You say, “Tu me manques,” which is closer to, “You are missing from me.”

I love that. “You are missing from me.” You are a part of me, you are essential to my being. You are like a limb or an organ, or blood. I cannot function, without you.

(via girlwithapumpkintattoo)

83237 Notes


A two week-old eastern bongo calf looks out from under her mother at Sydney’s Taronga zoo. Eastern (or highlands) bongos are critically endangered with as few as 75 remaining in small groups of 6-12 animals in their Kenyan upland range. Bongo are one of the largest species of antelope in the world and are recognised by their striking russet colour and large antlers which extend over their backs
Photograph: William West/AFP/Getty Images

A two week-old eastern bongo calf looks out from under her mother at Sydney’s Taronga zoo. Eastern (or highlands) bongos are critically endangered with as few as 75 remaining in small groups of 6-12 animals in their Kenyan upland range. Bongo are one of the largest species of antelope in the world and are recognised by their striking russet colour and large antlers which extend over their backs

Photograph: William West/AFP/Getty Images

(Quelle: Guardian, via landscapes-and-luxury)

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