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Personal Style
Apparel
Skin
Scene
Measurements
Length
13.05 m
Wingspan
17.73 m
Weight
7837.05 kg
Genetics
Black
Basic
Basic
Black
Basic
Basic
Black
Underbelly
Underbelly
Hatchday
Breed
Eye Type
Level 1 Obelisk
EXP: 0 / 245
STR
5
AGI
6
DEF
7
QCK
5
INT
8
VIT
8
MND
7
Biography
Old name Ainz. A Trio of Black Cats for my Grandad, who was always quoting a poem from an old anthology that he knew I liked. R.I.P. Big E.
༻∞ Jekkel ∞༺
| Professional Mouser |
"Meowr"
xx
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Five Eyes
In Hans' old Mill his three black cats
Watch the bins for the thieving rats. Whisker and claw, they crouch in the night, Their five eyes smouldering green and bright: Squeaks from the flour sacks, squeaks from where The cold wind stirs on the empty stair, Squeaking and scampering, everywhere. Then down they pounce, now in, now out, At whisking tail, and sniffing snout; While lean old Hans he snores away Till peep of light at break of day; Then up he climbs to his creaking mill, Out come his cats all grey with meal - Jeckel, and Jessup, and one-eyed Jill.
Poem by: Walter de la Mare. Coding done by: AnyaKnees.
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ORIGINAL LOOK: AETHER: Flaunt, Flair, Flutter w/ Rare
COMPLETED: 6th of October 2023 (Underbelly obtained)
COMPLETED: 6th of October 2023 (Underbelly obtained)
Walter John de la Mare OM CH (/ˈdɛləˌmɛər/; 25 April 1873 – 22 June 1956) was an English poet, short story writer and novelist. He is probably best remembered for his works for children, for his poem "The Listeners", and for his psychological horror short fiction, including "Seaton's Aunt" and "All Hallows". In 1921, his novel Memoirs of a Midget won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction, and his post-war Collected Stories for Children won the 1947 Carnegie Medal for British children's books. De la Mare described two distinct "types" of imagination – although "aspects" might be a better term: the childlike and the boylike. It was at the border between the two that Shakespeare, Dante, and the rest of the great poets lay. De la Mare opined that all children fall into the category of having a childlike imagination at first, which is usually replaced at some point in their lives. He explained in the lecture "Rupert Brooke and the Intellectual Imagination"that children "are not bound in by their groping senses. Facts to them are the liveliest of chameleons. [...] They are contemplatives, solitaries, fakirs, who sink again and again out of the noise and fever of existence and into a waking vision." His biographer Doris Ross McCrosson summarises this passage, "Children are, in short, visionaries." This visionary view of life can be seen as either vital creativity and ingenuity, or fatal disconnection from reality (or, in a limited sense, both). The increasing intrusions of the external world upon the mind, however, frighten the childlike imagination, which "retires like a shocked snail into its shell". From then onward the boyish imagination flourishes, the "intellectual, analytical type". |
(Wikipedia)
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Exalting Jekkel to the service of the Gladekeeper will remove them from your lair forever. They will leave behind a small sum of riches that they have accumulated. This action is irreversible.
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