After the defeat of Napoleon and the, the victorious nations stripped the French of the immediate ability to make war on their neighbours.
Britain found itself with thousands of French cannons that couldn’t be used by British forces for the fear of sabotage, incompatibility and the need to keep the British armouries working.
It was decided to use them as street decorations in London and other towns and cities that had played a vital part in the wars. As these cannons were replaced over the centuries, the design was copied with the cannon muzzle ball. There are now part of the streetscape in most of our towns and cities.
Britain found itself with thousands of French cannons that couldn’t be used by British forces for the fear of sabotage, incompatibility and the need to keep the British armouries working.
It was decided to use them as street decorations in London and other towns and cities that had played a vital part in the wars. As these cannons were replaced over the centuries, the design was copied with the cannon muzzle ball. There are now part of the streetscape in most of our towns and cities.
“A true fox calls sour not only those grapes he is unable to reach but also those he has reached and deprived others of.”
—Human, All Too Human, “The Wanderer and His Shadow,” §244.
—Human, All Too Human, “The Wanderer and His Shadow,” §244.
Forwarded from allegory, allegorier, allegoriest
L'expedition scintillante, Act 2: Untitled (light show), Kunsthaus, Bregenz, Austria, September (2002), Pierre Huyghe
Forwarded from alcoholic.exe
Was he an alcoholic? What was that? Someone who drinks all the time? Who can't say no to a drink? Who drinks in secret? Somebody who anticipates the next drink before he's finished with the one in front of him?
Forwarded from tomrum
People don’t understand the word ruthless. They think it means ‘mean.’ It’s not about being mean. It’s about seeing the bright, clear line that leads from A to B. The line that goes from motive to means. Beginning to end. It’s about seeing that bright, clear line and not caring about anything but the beautiful fact that you can see the solution. Not caring about anything else but the perfection of it.
- Marco, Book #30: The Reunion, pg. 71 (by K.A. Applegate)
- Marco, Book #30: The Reunion, pg. 71 (by K.A. Applegate)