mmh drunken affection
Hi! I saw that you wanted to see the old Napoleonic confession blog, an I wanted to tell you that there's a new one that I made!
@napoconfessions
If you ever wanted to try that out
*runs away as fast as I can*
thank you for the news!!
Glad the freak gets to be resumed🫡
The urge to dwelve into the rich history, delight in interpreting sources, and try to represent the past as accurately as possible
vs.
The urge to draw old men yaoi
HAPPY (late 💔) BIRTHDAY TO DAVOUT YYAAAYYYY
thầy vũ hãy ban con may mắn so con sẽ pass mấy cái finals please
I wanted to compliment your art. And your crazy ideas. You are certainly one of us.
@neylo
Thank you so much!!
This means a lot to me, I'm glad I've found a place where I can share them hhehe
Quick sketch of some of the important napoleonic medical staff
Old doctors make me go insane
Forgot to post this, but I recently remembered one of the monuments erected 1899 to commemorate the two battles of Zürich
there's a poem on the back, thought I'd give an English translation
How our town suffered a hundred years ago, When the stranger fought with the stranger, When bullets rang through the silent forest, The columns of fire smoked, Flags waved, The father tells the son and he then admonishes the grandson: Boy become a man! Even if those old wounds healed, Don't forget how our mothers suffered; The enemy's army devoured the children's bread, The misery was great, immense was the hardship! If the city is never to experience such suffering, The coming generation must rally: Keep watch and hold the defense, To protect Swiss borders, Swiss honour!
Even though the city itself remained pretty much unharmed, the poem makes reference to the uh- abundantly-practiced act of looting that took place in order to feed the armies