Loved one got top surgery yesterday so I made this for him but I think y’all would appreciate it too
It seems like Watson is rather used to Holmes touching him rather frequently, but I like to think that sometimes he still can get surprised (and flustered)
random thoughts
I hate that thing some people do where it's like. "I left my wallet on the table to see if you'd say anything" or "I wanted to see if you'd wash the car if I stopped doing it"
Cause like
I dont know about anyone else
But I am perpetually hovering three inches above the strong subconscious belief that everyone knows what they're doing at all times except me, so if you change your normal patterns and I notice, then I will assume it is an intentional choice with a thought-out plan behind it and I will avoid interfering
And if I don't notice, because I won't, because why would I, because not much bothers me and if you don't say anything to indicate you are bothered then how would I KNOW
Decided to draw one of my favorite moments in The Hound of the Baskervilles as Sherlock Hound...
Most know the Criterion Bar as the place where Dr. John Watson met his young friend Stamford on that fateful night before being introduced to the one and only Sherlock Holmes, the man who would be the star of Dr. Watson’s writings.
What is not commonly known or spoken about is the Criterion Bar’s Victorian history…
That of being a Victorian Gay Bar.
Now official ‘gay bars’ were not exactly a thing in the Victorian Era due to anti-LGBT laws (including Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885). That said, the Criterion Bar was known (when the stories were written) as a meeting point for gay men in the Victorian era.
‘A New City of Friends’: London and Homosexuality in the 1890s
By Matt Cook
“..Ives noted that the Criterion Bar on Piccadilly Circus was ‘a great centre for inverts’ until it closed in 1905 .”
The Inverted City: London and the Constitution of Homosexuality 1885-1914, M. D. Cook
https://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/jspui/handle/123456789/1620
The Criterion Bar is spoken about by George Cecil Ives, an LGBT advocate in the Victorian era and leader of the secret LGBT society, the Order of Chaeronea.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Chaeronea
George Cecil Ives was also friends to both Oscar Wilde and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and George Cecil Ives were friends and cricket teammates on the team “Allahakbarries”, which, at the time, they thought meant ‘Heaven Help Us’.
When it comes to Sherlock Holmes, of all the bars within London that could be chosen for Dr. Watson and Stamford to meet, and for Watson to be lead from to be introduced to Holmes, Sir. Arthur Conan Doyle chose to use -that- one.
(Special thanks to @ImaBretthead for pointing out the bar’s past.)
“ Willie Hornung, the brother-in-Law Of ACD, was a friend of George Ives. He used him as the model for the gentleman thief Raffles, in his series of books. Sir Arthur was also acquainted with Mr. Ives.
Cafe Royal, The Langham Hotel, The Criteron Bar…These are not coincidences.”
- @ImaBretthead
“Watson has some remarkable characteristics of his own to which in his modesty he has given small attention amid his exaggerated estimates of my own performances.”
Two dogs sighted in passing. Where are they heading?
tfw you’re doing some spying and forget that personal space is a thing and that your colleague is head over heels in love with you.
Who else thinks Kwazii would do this?
@cactisays <3
lighting our red string of fate on fire to see what material it's made out of. practicing sheep shank knots with our red string of fate. weaving a basketball hoop's net with it and slam dunking our relationship through it. tying a macrame hammock with it for us to sleep outside under a tree in. dragging you around through a county fair by the red string. hello
im not really sure what im gonna post here probly just random art and stuffs
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