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O Mio Babbino Caro

2009 November 3

Happy Anniversary, Ted.

2009 October 31

Ah, love, let us be true
To one another! for the world, which seems
To lie before us like a land of dreams,
So various, so beautiful, so new,
Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light,
Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain;
And we are here as on a darkling plain
Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,
Where ignorant armies clash by night.

Forever… and ever… and ever.

2009 October 31

Happy Halloween!

You’re Gonna Miss Me (When I’m Dead and Gone)

2009 October 29
by constantia

Screaming Mummies

2009 October 29

screaming mummies

For well over a century, the contorted features of ancient mummies have led to speculation of untold pain and horrible deaths. The examples quoted above are from the examination of Egyptian mummies more than 120 years ago. Today, similar descriptions can still be found in television programs and academic writings. “Is this the face of a queen? What kind of terrible end did she meet?” and “a terrible head wound, an agonized scream,” intones the narrator of “Secrets of Egypt’s Lost Queen,” a 2007 documentary. A photo caption in the scholarly volume Mummies and Death in Egypt (2006) reads “mummy of a boy five years of age, fixed in agony.” And the widely covered 2007 discovery of Chachapoya mummies in Peru prompted this newspaper headline “Moment 600 years ago that terror came to Mummies of the Amazon” and copy “Hands over her eyes and her face gripped with terror, the woman’s fear of death is all too obvious.”

Mummies with their mouths agape or lips pulled back as if they are screaming or writhing in pain are truly startling. Two of the most famous–designated Unknown Woman A and Unknown Man E–are from a cache of royal mummies found in 1881 at Deir el-Bahri in Egypt. When first unwrapped in the late nineteenth century, they provoked the shocked reactions quoted above.

Such mummies, however, are found not just in Egypt but worldwide, in Palermo, Sicily, Guanajuato, Mexico, and, as noted above, in Peru. Some of these bodies were purposefully preserved, though by various methods, while others are natural or, you might say, accidental mummies. What does that say about the supposed frozen-mask-of-agony phenomenon? Are screaming mummies really testaments to horrific deaths? Or are they the result of natural processes, botched or ad hoc mummification jobs, or the depredations of tomb robbers?

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Hexenszene

2009 October 27
by constantia

Night of the Vampire

2009 October 22

Where Did You Sleep Last Night

2009 October 20

Viv’s Photos of Jasper’s First Birthday Party!

2009 October 19

2009 October 16
by constantia

“Nightmare on Elm Street Part 8”

Beans enters the picture at 5:41!