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(via best--excuse)
Posted on May 21, 2013 via Cara Delevingne with 159,248 notes
Source: thecaradelevingne
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Posted on May 19, 2013 via (@tyleroakley) with 4,554 notes
Source: tyleroakley
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Posted on May 19, 2013 via observando with 237,108 notes
Source: observando
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Posted on May 19, 2013 via with 14,146 notes
Source: alostsoulx
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easily one of the most amazing casts that has ever been and will ever be.
Posted on May 19, 2013 via Cinematic High with 82,564 notes
Source: cinematichigh
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(via wasntmeantobe)
Posted on May 19, 2013 via Enrico Francis with 10,883 notes
Source: enricofrancis
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(via wasntmeantobe)
Posted on May 19, 2013 via Tres-Glamorous with 199 notes
Source: tres-glamorous
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(via g-y-p-s-y-h-e-a-r-t-s)
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(via wasntmeantobe)
Posted on May 19, 2013 via hey hun... with 1,936 notes
Source: pineapples-elephants
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(via theflawless)
Posted on May 19, 2013 via Meggy Grace with 11,175 notes
Source: meggygrace
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(via unescapable)
Posted on May 19, 2013 via vanillarosy with 59,865 notes
Source: weheartit.com
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Posted on May 19, 2013 via We all go a little mad sometimes. with 132,776 notes
Source: alostsoulx
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So true.
Posted on May 19, 2013 via Love Kardashian with 7,768 notes
Source: lovekardashian
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(via g-y-p-s-y-h-e-a-r-t-s)
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The original story of the little mermaid is that she must kill the prince in order to be human, and in the end, she loves him too much and kills herself instead.
The artwork is too great not to reblog.
Ok, ok - important expansion: she only has to kill the Prince because the deal was if he fell in love with her she could be human forever, and he didn’t. By which I mean, he was a good person and genuinely nice to her, but he didn’t fall in love. He fell in love with someone else, also perfectly nice - not the seawitch in disguise, fu Disney. The Mermaid is told she can only return to the sea now if she kills the Prince. She goes into the room where he and his lover lie sleeping and they look so beautiful and happy together that she can’t do it.
That’s why she kills herself. And because it was a noble act she returns to sea as foam.
One moral of the story was that women shouldn’t fundamentally change who they are for love of a man, and in theory Han Christian Anderson wrote it for a ballerina with whom he fell in love. She was marrying someone else who wouldn’t let her dance.
(via g-y-p-s-y-h-e-a-r-t-s)
Posted on May 17, 2013 via †♥∞ Ericka Villongco with 485,405 notes
Source: xxdardarxx







