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"How strangely are human affairs conducted..."

@little-lion-rampant-blog / little-lion-rampant-blog.tumblr.com

Self-indulgent blog for my favorite history things - with a focus on early American era and ancient Roman history. Mostly reblogged posts. I never stop talking in my tags. Art blog: www.turquoise-spark.tumblr.com
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YES i cheated: i used textures for the background… too lazy to draw trees and leaves and trunks (don’t look at me like that!) and it’s a good technique to hide your terrible linearts!

soooooo…. here a request i received for the Burr/Hamilton duel and i was like ‘why not?’. they are supposed to be old and Hamilton a little chubby but my hands hate me and i have another idea of drawing rn. it’s awfull. it’s historically inaccurate. i’m sorry. leave me alone!!!

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marcvscicero

happy birthday to rome’s biggest loser

  • wrote a poem called “the sea god glaucus” at 14, and then continued to write bad poetry for the rest of his life
  • consistently referenced and quoted the greek epics in his letters to atticus, a lifelong friend 
  • believed that children were a gift from the gods and that if it wasn’t natural to feel affection for children, then there could be no natural tie between any two humans at all 
  • cried. a lot. especially during his exile. and probably every time he saw his daughter
  • became consul in 63 BC and allegedly saved rome from a conspiracy 
  • was too witty for his own good and didn’t know when to keep his mouth closed
  • outlasted pompey, caesar, crassus and clodius, as well as his own daughter, brother and nephew (though not by much)
  • his final surviving letter to atticus ends with ‘adsum igitur’; it means ‘i am present’ 
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Um. Excuse me? Hamilton was not chief of staff, thank you very much. Robert Hanson Harrison didn’t drag Hamilton out of bed every morning to be blatantly ignored like this.

First of all. Meade went to Dalston for 6 years and Harrow for hardly a school year if at all. Second “Hamilton’s directives”???? Does Washington not exist??

CAPTAIN???? DID THIS MAN DO NO RESEARCH???

Interesting place to randomly drop “One of Hamilton’s best friends” though.

Also all of their ranks like… change from mention to mention. Harrison started Colonel then suddenly he’s calling him lieutenant colonel

MILITARY SECRETARY!!????

DID I READ THAT RIGHT. DID HE SAY–

HE SAID IT AGAIN. HE’S SERIOUS.

ALSO Harrison was more experienced than tilghman. And JOHNSTON??? HE’s sayin Johnstin was one of the more experienced members of the staff???? HE JOINED IN JANUARY!!!! Fitzgerald was more experienced than he was!!!!!

I am literally standing in a book store and seeeething. I almost threw the book. I had to put it down and take deep breaths and try to calm down. I cant believe.

WHO THE FUCK IS JOHN BAYLOR. THERE WAS NO JOHN BAYLOR. THERE WAS A GEORGE BAYLOR. BUT FOLTHDDGDYSTDG£~|:)!,)-@$(

Oh this had to be the best one yet. Yes. Yes thanks, Tucker, for the clarification. I’m sure that’s–i’m sure that’s exactly how it was. They were a platonic and straight alexander the great and Hephaestion to each other.

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iafayettes
Mr. Laurence [Henry Laurens], poor old Gentleman his Grey hairs will come with sorrow to the Grave. Will he support the loss of his son with the fortitude of Cato when Marcius fell coverd with wounds in defence of his Country? Thus fell the Brave Col. Laurence [Laurens], Lamented by all who knew him. Freedom mourns over his urn, and Honour decks the sod which covers his ashes with unfadeing Laurels.

Abigail Adams to John Thaxter, 26 October 1782

Abigail is probably referencing Joseph Addison’s Cato (1713), wherein Marcus, a son of Cato the Younger, dies while resisting his father’s traitorous ally, Syphax. In act IV, scene IV of the tragedy, Cato views his son’s body, and says:

Welcome, my Son! Here lay him down my Friends,
Full in my Sight, that I may view at Leisure
The bloody Corse, and count those glorious Wounds.
—How beautiful is Death, when earn’d by Virtue!
Who would not be that Youth? What a Pity is it
That we can die but once to serve our Country!
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Virtually all other biographers ignore the love between Laurens and Hamilton. One author, for example, mentions every aspect of Washington’s sexual scandals, however untenable, and thereby highlights his virility, but makes no mention of the controversy around how to read the Laurens correspondence or the fact that some historians for decades have been using it as evidence of same-sex love. Indeed, the book, which highlights “intimacy” in the Founders’ lives, limits itself to that shared between men and women, despite the fact that the author’s conceptualization of intimacy is not solely sexual and include bonds between parent and daughter and platonic, if flirtatious, male-female friendships. The decision to leave aside intimate bonds between fathers and sons and also between men leads perhaps to Laurens’s being cast as a participant in a decidedly heterosexual relationship. Indeed, the author quotes from a letter between the two but uses only the passage where Hamilton asks Laurens to find him a suitable wife.

Thomas Foster, Sex and the Founding Fathers (via lafaynoot)

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