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paganroots:

By k n u l p

mishasteaparty:

The first time I went training with Chris, it was in Ken’s house in England. Behind the house he had a shed and there were a bunch of logs that he was chopping for the firewood… x

makorrafanatics:

lovinlegendofkorra:

WANT

OHMYGOD!! 

House of M #07

“No more Mutants.”
amaranthinemoon:

Out of all the Goddesses Artemis is my favorite ^_^
Artemis Goddess of the Hunt Also known as: Artume, Cynthia, Diana, Locheia, Phaesporia Associated Abilities: Animal Ken, Art, Awareness, Marksmanship, Medicine, Survival,Hunting Associated Epic Attributes: Dexterity, Perception Associated Purviews: Moon Rivals: Bastet, Chang’e, Mah Enemies: Andarta, Epona Artemis is the moon goddess of the Dodekatheon, and a huntress without peer as well. She is the virgin goddess of the wilderness, as at home chasing deer through the countryside as she is on Olympus; her temper, especially in regards to men who attempt to breach her aloof wall of disinterest, is legendary, as is her faithfulness to her brother Apollo. As the goddess of virginity and childhood, she is the patron of all who choose to stay in those states, and as a goddess of childbirth is on hand to welcome new innocence into the world. Artemis’ and Apollo’s Birth When Hera discovered that Zeus had been unfaithful to her with the titan Leto, she laid a curse on her, making her unable to give birth on any solid ground. Once Leto went into labor, there were no places on the mainland or the islands she could go to give birth; luckily, the island Delos took pity on her and rose into the air, becoming the only land that was not on land itself, and there Leto gave birth to her twins. Artemis was born first, and, already a goddess of childbirth, she became her mother’s midwife and aided her in giving birth to her brother, Apollo. Artemis as the sister of Apollo, is a kind of female Apollo, that is, she as a female divinity represented the same idea that Apollo did as a male divinity. This relation between the two is in many other cases described as the relation of husband and wife, and there seems to have been a tradition which actually described Artemis as the wife of Apollo. In the character of sister of Apollo, Artemis is like her brother armed with a bow, quiver, and arrows, and sends plague and death among men and animals : she is a thea apollousa. Sudden deaths, but more especially those of women, are described as the effect of her arrows. She also acts sometimes in conjunction with her brother.  Artemis is moreover, like Apollo, unmarried; she is a maiden divinity never conquered by love. The priests and priestesses devoted to her service were bound to live pure and chaste, and trangressions of their vows of chastity were severely punished. She was worshipped in several places together with her brother; and the worship of both divinities was believed to have come from the Hyperboreans, and Hyperborean maidens brought sacrifices to Delos. The laurel was sacred to both divinities, and both were regarded as the founders and protectors of towns and streets.  Artemis and Zeus When Artemis was a child, she walked all the way to Olympus and climbed onto Zeus’ lap. When he asked her what she wanted, she begged that he would grant her several boons for being his daughter; when he agreed she asked that Apollo be always her equal and never her superior, that she should always remain a virgin and never be given in marriage, that she be given a choir of nine-year-old girls to be her attendants, and that the nymphs should take care of her dogs and hunting bow when she was not on the hunt. Laughing, Zeus agreed to all of her terms, and Artemis’ place on Olympus was assured, much to Hera’s annoyance. Artemis and Actaeon While Artemis bathed in a mountain pool, Actaeon, prince of Thebes, happened upon her. He was entranced by her beauty and hid in the bushes to spy upon her while she was nude; when she discovered the liberty he had taken, she was enraged and turned him into a stag. The stag was immediately killed by Acteaon’s own hounds, and Artemis’ virtue and reputation thus remained intact. Artemis and Hippolytus Hippolytus was a beautiful young man, so captivating that he caught the eye of Aphrodite herself; however, the youth loved only Artemis and swore himself to become her devotee, rebuffing Aphrodite’s advances and pledging himself to a celibate life of worship and hunting. Furious that he had rejected her, Aphrodite caused Phaedra, the wife of Theseus, to fall in love with him; when he rejected Phaedra as well, she wrote to her husband and claimed that Hippolytus had raped her. Enraged, Theseus called upon his father for revenge, and Poseidon sent a sea monster to frighten Hippolytus’ horses and cause him to be thrown from his chariot and killed. Artemis, grieving and furious at Aphrodite’s behavior, retaliated by hunting down Adonis, Aphrodite’s favored lover, and killing him like an animal.

amaranthinemoon:

Out of all the Goddesses Artemis is my favorite ^_^

Artemis Goddess of the Hunt

Also known as: Artume, Cynthia, Diana, Locheia, Phaesporia
Associated Abilities: Animal Ken, Art, Awareness, Marksmanship, Medicine, Survival,Hunting
Associated Epic Attributes: Dexterity, Perception
Associated Purviews: Moon
Rivals: Bastet, Chang’e, Mah
Enemies: Andarta, Epona

Artemis is the moon goddess of the Dodekatheon, and a huntress without peer as well. She is the virgin goddess of the wilderness, as at home chasing deer through the countryside as she is on Olympus; her temper, especially in regards to men who attempt to breach her aloof wall of disinterest, is legendary, as is her faithfulness to her brother Apollo. As the goddess of virginity and childhood, she is the patron of all who choose to stay in those states, and as a goddess of childbirth is on hand to welcome new innocence into the world.

Artemis’ and Apollo’s Birth
When Hera discovered that Zeus had been unfaithful to her with the titan Leto, she laid a curse on her, making her unable to give birth on any solid ground. Once Leto went into labor, there were no places on the mainland or the islands she could go to give birth; luckily, the island Delos took pity on her and rose into the air, becoming the only land that was not on land itself, and there Leto gave birth to her twins. Artemis was born first, and, already a goddess of childbirth, she became her mother’s midwife and aided her in giving birth to her brother, Apollo.
Artemis as the sister of Apollo, is a kind of female Apollo, that is, she as a female divinity represented the same idea that Apollo did as a male divinity. This relation between the two is in many other cases described as the relation of husband and wife, and there seems to have been a tradition which actually described Artemis as the wife of Apollo. In the character of sister of Apollo, Artemis is like her brother armed with a bow, quiver, and arrows, and sends plague and death among men and animals : she is a thea apollousa. Sudden deaths, but more especially those of women, are described as the effect of her arrows. She also acts sometimes in conjunction with her brother.

Artemis is moreover, like Apollo, unmarried; she is a maiden divinity never conquered by love. The priests and priestesses devoted to her service were bound to live pure and chaste, and trangressions of their vows of chastity were severely punished. She was worshipped in several places together with her brother; and the worship of both divinities was believed to have come from the Hyperboreans, and Hyperborean maidens brought sacrifices to Delos. The laurel was sacred to both divinities, and both were regarded as the founders and protectors of towns and streets.

Artemis and Zeus
When Artemis was a child, she walked all the way to Olympus and climbed onto Zeus’ lap. When he asked her what she wanted, she begged that he would grant her several boons for being his daughter; when he agreed she asked that Apollo be always her equal and never her superior, that she should always remain a virgin and never be given in marriage, that she be given a choir of nine-year-old girls to be her attendants, and that the nymphs should take care of her dogs and hunting bow when she was not on the hunt. Laughing, Zeus agreed to all of her terms, and Artemis’ place on Olympus was assured, much to Hera’s annoyance.

Artemis and Actaeon
While Artemis bathed in a mountain pool, Actaeon, prince of Thebes, happened upon her. He was entranced by her beauty and hid in the bushes to spy upon her while she was nude; when she discovered the liberty he had taken, she was enraged and turned him into a stag. The stag was immediately killed by Acteaon’s own hounds, and Artemis’ virtue and reputation thus remained intact.

Artemis and Hippolytus
Hippolytus was a beautiful young man, so captivating that he caught the eye of Aphrodite herself; however, the youth loved only Artemis and swore himself to become her devotee, rebuffing Aphrodite’s advances and pledging himself to a celibate life of worship and hunting. Furious that he had rejected her, Aphrodite caused Phaedra, the wife of Theseus, to fall in love with him; when he rejected Phaedra as well, she wrote to her husband and claimed that Hippolytus had raped her. Enraged, Theseus called upon his father for revenge, and Poseidon sent a sea monster to frighten Hippolytus’ horses and cause him to be thrown from his chariot and killed. Artemis, grieving and furious at Aphrodite’s behavior, retaliated by hunting down Adonis, Aphrodite’s favored lover, and killing him like an animal.

shorthorrorstory:

I don’t normally feel bad for Magneto, especially after M-Day, and what he’s done to Pietro and Wanda, and to an extent, Lorna, but I did feel for him here, even if it was only for a second. 

shorthorrorstory:

I don’t normally feel bad for Magneto, especially after M-Day, and what he’s done to Pietro and Wanda, and to an extent, Lorna, but I did feel for him here, even if it was only for a second. 

biodigitalfrontier:

Young Ian McKellen

waitingontheroof:

xD