fledge capable of flying, from Middle English flegge, from Old English -flycge; akin to Old High German flucki capable of flying, Old English flEogan to fly -- more at FLY
intransitive verb, of a young bird: to acquire the feathers necessary for flight or independent activity
Iterestingly enough, I looked at the work first (rather than the bio) and thought Romaine was a she...a sister in this queer world.
Quelle suprise!?
I revisited the work (particularly the runners) to figure it out.
I think it is the depth of emotion that gets me (even still) - draws the yin from the yang. My husband sure doesn't get the nuance of facial triumph, tragedy, glory - he doesn't even get 'close your lips, I'm at my wit's end and I'm going to eat your face entirely if you are not soon QUIET!'
3 comments:
Devastatingly beautiful.
Sad
and beautiful
Life
Pick up your camera again
the corner is not the place to be
beauty is everywhere
Iterestingly enough, I looked at the work first (rather than the bio) and thought Romaine was a she...a sister in this queer world.
Quelle suprise!?
I revisited the work (particularly the runners) to figure it out.
I think it is the depth of emotion that gets me (even still) - draws the yin from the yang. My husband sure doesn't get the nuance of facial triumph, tragedy, glory - he doesn't even get 'close your lips, I'm at my wit's end and I'm going to eat your face entirely if you are not soon QUIET!'
Wow I say to Romaine the boy. Wow. Wow. Wow.
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