Archduchess Eleanor of Austria (1534 – 1594), Duchess of Mantua and Montferrat
Sybil is not very well known and it’s a crying shame. The 16-year old was personally thanked by George Washington for her heroic feat, riding twice the distance of Paul Revere and warning the militia and rebellion sympathizers of the sacking of Danbury, CT. But thanks to Longfellow’s severely historically inaccurate poem, more people remember Revere’s ride than hers. *sighs*
By the way? Revere got captured by the British after his stint and had a ton of other riders out on the roads with him/to switch off with. Sybil Ludington was by herself, in the rain, and she beat highwaymen trying to stop her doing her duty WITH A STICK, still managing to get the job done and home safe.
Thanks, Syb. You were one badass lady!
Thursday’s Foxy Doxy: Anne Bonny and Mary Read
This week is special because I have not one foxy lady, but two! Anne Bonny and Mary Read were Caribbean pirates in the early 18th century, the infamous lesbian lovers who dressed and caroused like men, and all around bad girls.
Anne was born…
Bonny’s last words to her former lover, Calico Jack Rackham, upon his imprisonment and soon-to-be-hanging were “if you had fought like a Man, you need not have been hang’d like a Dog.”
(Source: sexualtiger)
For Apollo, my Twin:
Keep on trucking
despite screens and fleeting moments
and can’t see and welcome to poetry.
My friends in high abodes and in my fields of daisy thoughts
assure me that
Spring is Coming,
and I tell them the same.
Cosmic energies are constantly shifting;
it’s terrifying to see how much everything is always falling apart
but a part of me
enjoys the quiet decay
and the way change
drips
lately
out of every leaky faucet.
Eventually you learn to love the dripping–
It falls in a rhythm not unlike my own heartbeat
and that, I think,
is true.
(Source: joohmeuamor)
(Source: draca-rys)