postmarxed:

afloweroutofstone:

sincewearetellingstories:

nixcraft:

Google street view in Rome

The best part is. That’s actually a massive cat sanctuary for Rome’s cats…. at the place where Caesar got stabbed to death.

But seriously the cat sanctuary is great (go visit if you can and you can visit so many cats). And while it would seem like the archaeological site is the sanctuary, there’s actually a little area down some stairs on a wall just out of the frame where the keep the majority of the cats which can’t be let out to roam. Like blind cats, cats with specific diseases, and cats which need medication.

It’s a very good place and everyone should know about and (if possible) donate. I got to go this summer (2018) and they had over 50 cats, 30 of which need specialized care or can’t be let outside anymore.

www.gattidiroma.net is their website where you can learn more or donate!

I went there while in Rome last year and they have a cat named Brutus

Julius Ceasar got stabbed just to the left of that tree in that last picture, IIRC.

@thatsthenorthstar

wild-west-wind:

wild-west-wind:

You know what fantasy writing needs? Working class wizards.

  • A crew of enchanters maintaining the perpetual flames that run the turbines that generate electricity, covered in ash and grime and stinking of hot chilies and rare mushrooms used for the enchantments
  • A wizard specializing in construction, casting feather fall on every worker, and enchanting every hammer to drive nails in straight, animating the living clay that makes up the core of the crane
  • An elderly wizard and her apprentice who transmute fragile broken objects. From furniture, to rotten wood beams, to delicate jewelry
  • A battle magician, trained with only a few rudimentary spells to solve a shortage of trained wizards on the front who uses his healing spells to help folks around town
  • Wizarding shops where cheery little mages enchant wooden blocks to be hammered into the sides of homes. Hammer this into the attic and it will scare off termites, toss this in the fire and clean your chimney, throw this in the air and all dust in the room gets sucked up
  • Wizard loggers who transmute cut trees into solid, square beams, reducing waste, and casting spells to speed up regrowth. The forest, they know, will not be too harsh on them if the lost tree’s children may grow in its place
  • Wizard farmers who grow their crops in arcane sigils to increase yield, or produce healthier fruit
  • Factory wizards who control a dozen little constructs that keep machines cleaned and operational, who cast armor to protect the hands of workers, and who, when the factory strikes for better wages, freeze the machines in place to ensure their bosses can’t bring anyone new in.

Anyway, think about it.

  • Construction wizards to turn back time to root out wood worm and strengthen old buildings.
  • A wizard tailors who transmutes cloth into fully made clothes without seems and leaving behind no scraps
  • A wizard who works in public transit, timing out teleports with detailed schedules, time magic, and enchanted communications, sending dozens of people to far away cities for a day or work or leisure
  • A team of wizard gardeners tend to trees grown far outside their native range, and ideal climate, encircled with runes and fed potions to grow none the less
  • A wizard sits in their office in the aqueduct, re-casting the spells that allow its precious water to flow to the city uphill
  • A wizard fisher casts water repelling spells on the sailors and the stairs, keeps the hoist on the anchor from rusting, casts balls of heat that keep everyone warm below decks. Their real job is to herd fish together so they can be caught in single huge nets, and keep them cold as the boat returns to land.

There are so many possibilities outside of “stodgy academic who wears ugly robes” and “Very good holy man who helps everyone and the fact they’ve never had a job is never brought up” and “evil wizard toiling away on great evils in his evil tower in the evil country.”

celia-rguez:

“It is usually very common for old magic users to bind their sight to a loyal pet of their choice. Illnesses such as cataracts and glaucoma occur fairly often, and even magic is unable to cure these physical issues, being the eyes specially delicate organs; Spirit senses are very developed after years of experience, so it’s much easier to form a bond with the animal. Most of the time they report to being able to see much better than when they had their own eyes.”

Instagram ➡ celia.rguez