Claire: Ian, you can’t ask God to kill someone.
Jamie: Yeah, do your own dirty work.
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one gifset per episode: 7.08 turning points
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Wednesday 100: Dialogues
Ian doesn't mind traveling without (human) companionship — there is even peace in moving softly through forests with only his thoughts — and yet this time he finds himself breaking the quiet, speaking aloud to his mother.
“For all that ye've said I have too much Fraser in me,” he tells her, “it seems I've Murray enough to keep convincin’ pigheaded Frasers to value their lives over their limbs.”
He smiles imagining her responding hmph, and tries to keep from conjuring a conversation next with Uncle Jamie, one about the precise feeling he might have had the moment he saw Auntie Claire.
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Morte e vida Severina
Somos muitos Severinos
iguais em tudo na vida:
na mesma cabeça grande
que a custo é que se equilibra,
no mesmo ventre crescido
sobre as mesmas pernas finas,
e iguais também porque o sangue
que usamos tem pouca tinta.
E se somos Severinos
iguais em tudo na vida,
morremos de morte igual,
mesma morte Severina:
que é a morte de que se morre
de velhice antes dos trinta
de emboscada antes dos vinte,
de fome um pouco por dia.
MELO NETO, J. C. Obra completa. Rio Janeiro: Nova Aguilar, 1994 (fragmento).
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*Has a mental breakdown over Outlander for the trillionth time*
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Wait. I need a minute to be okay with some thing.
I, not having looked up his IMDb, have been muttering “He should play Oliver Stark’s younger brother in some thing” as I watch John Bell on “Outlander” for years.
So imagine my shock, and annoyance, when I finally start watching “Into The Badlands” and get to Season Two.
How are Ryder and Gabriel not brothers?!
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Young Ian: Man, I love bananas. They’re always so tangy and make your mouth all tingly.
Jamie: That's...definitely not what a banana is supposed to be like.
[later]
Young Ian: Auntie Claire says I’m allergic to bananas.
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Wednesday 100: Fathering
He almost gets lost on the way back, mind so full that only Rollo's bark saves him.
The sight of his smiling son, the gift of offering him a name, the opportunity to remember the joys in his marriage and to see the result — these are the things which can fill him when he regrets the time he missed and will continue to miss, and the ways that he cannot claim that beloved boy as his own.
He wonders what filled Uncle Jamie after Helwater, before Auntie Claire returned, with only Fergus and Ian's younger, runaway self at his side.
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