i'm maddie.
twenty years; so young but getting old.
i seem to post a lot of art about brains, pictures of places i've been and will go, and sometimes the music in my head.
still figuring this tumblr thing out.
have a nice day.
So raise a glass to turnings of the season
And watch it as it arcs towards the sun
And you must bear your neighbour’s burden, within reason
And your labours will be borne when all is done
(Source: detailsitfabric)
(Source: gofuckingnuts, via sacred-nature)
The sky is random. Even calling it “sky”
is an attempt to make a meaning, say,
a shape, from the humanly visible part
of shapelessness in endlessness. It’s what
we do, in some ways it’s entirely what
we do—and so the devastating rose
of a galaxy’s being born, the fatal lamé
of another’s being torn and dying, we frame
in the lenses of our super-duper telescopes the way
we would those other completely incomprehensible
fecund and dying subjects at a family picnic.
Making them “subjects.” “Rose.” “Lamé.” The way
our language scissors the enormity to scales
we can tolerate. The way we gild and rubricate
in memory, or edit out selectively.
An infant’s gentle snoring, even, apportions
the eternal. When they moved to the boonies,
Dorothy Wordsworth measured their walk
to Crewkerne—then the nearest town—
by pushing a device invented especially
for such a project, a “perambulator”: seven miles.
Her brother William pottered at his daffodils poem.
Ten thousand saw I at a glance: by which he meant
too many to count, but could only say it in counting.