BC Neanderthal Mindset
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Civilization comes at a cost.
The price is steep, all things good and mighty surrendered, virility, wildness, risk. It costs our Strength, our Courage, our Wisdom, our mastery of self and most of all our honor and nobility.

BCNMindset@proton.me
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Depiction of an angel attempting to prevent Father Time from unrolling the scroll on which the destiny of mankind is recorded.

“Would but some wingéd Angel ere too late
Arrest the yet unfolded Roll of Fate,
And make the stern Recorder otherwise
Enregister, or quite obliterate!

Ah, Love! could you and I with Him conspire
To grasp this sorry Scheme of Things entire,
Would not we shatter it to bits--and then
Re-mould it nearer to the Heart's Desire!”

The roll of Fate
Walter Crane, 1882
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'Still the race of Hero-spirits/ Pass the lamp from hand to hand;/ Age from age the Words inherits-/ 'Wife, and Child, and Fatherland.’

illustration for the poem The World's Age' by Charles Kingsley
By Walter Crane, titled “Race of Hero Spirits Pass”
“Tonttu” (Brownie)
Johan August Malmström
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“Väinämöinen Attaches Strings to his Kantele”

Johan Zacharias Blackstadius, 1851
The King of Thule

Pierre Jean Van der Ouderaa, 1896
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The Witch – Jean-François Portaels
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Forwarded from Hyperborean Radio (The Final Episodes) (T.L.K.)
Indigenous Peoples Day
Part 1

Indigenous... its a term often thrown around excluding our people, yet we are not only indigenous to Europe but the Northwoods period. The caves hold the ancient markings of our people, statues and toys buried for millennium, legends rooted in our time upon the continent and even arguably across the sea, this is marked not only in these ancient elements but in the sheer physical and spiritual roots of our people.
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Idyll (Pan Amidst Columns), 1875
Arnold Bocklin
Legend of the Rosstrappe

The Rosstrappe is a massive, granite crag located in the Harz mountain region of central Germany. Rife with lore, myth and tales, but one stands out as cemented in legend.

According to the lore, a hulking giant that went by the name “Bodo” had his eyes set on the local king’s daughter, Brunhilde.
The king’s intention was to wed her to the giant, against her wishes, but when she caught wind of the plot, she fled by horseback.
Riding her white stallion through the region, she came across the crag, which presented an obstacle to her escape.
Resolute to gain her freedom from marriage to the monstrous giant, she goaded her horse to leap to the other side, with her pursuer seemingly falling to his death, but Bodo turned into a dog.

As Brunhilde’s horse leapt the expanse, however, she lost her golden crown, which is now guarded by Bodo the dog in the valley of the river.

The river was given the name “Bode” after the giant.

On the top of the Rosstrappe above Thale, you can see the hoof print of Brunhilde's horse. From the Hexentanzplatz (“Witches Dance Floor) on the opposite mountain, you can look across to where she leapt from the Rosstrappe.
A Nachzehrer, which translates to "devourer/sapper of energy," is a cross between a vampire and a ghoul.
As the lore goes, after someone commits suicide or dies an accidental death, their body transforms into a flesh-hungry undead monster in the grave.

The Nachzehrer is different than the charming, pop-culture vampire. Instead, this monster feasts on his own dead flesh and that of other corpses.
"Lenore" (1774) is a poem by Gottfried August Bürger.
The verse die Todten Reiten schnell ("The dead travel fast") is famous for being cited by Bram Stoker in the first chapter of his novel "Dracula" (1897)

"What! ride an hundred miles to-night,
By thy mad fancies driven!
Dost hear the bell with its sullen swell.
As it rumbles out eleven?"
"Look forth! look forth! the moon shines bright:
We and the dead gallop fast thro' the night.
'Tis for a wager I bear thee away
To the nuptial couch ere break of day."