Burn.

(via valiumpoetics)

thisveryirregularhead:

I ask myself the same thing, Maggie.

thisveryirregularhead:

I ask myself the same thing, Maggie.

(Source: speakslow-tellmelove)

01-gav:

“This was one of those situations where objective criticism falls by the  wayside. I love early 20th Century suits, especially on women; I love  knee-length trousers; I love Downton Abbey and continue to  masochistically watch it despite the fact that I spend most of each  episode shouting obscenities at Julian Fellowes’ soap-opera hack style  of screenwriting.” — from Ralph Lauren Fall 2012, at Hello, Tailor.

01-gav:

“This was one of those situations where objective criticism falls by the wayside. I love early 20th Century suits, especially on women; I love knee-length trousers; I love Downton Abbey and continue to masochistically watch it despite the fact that I spend most of each episode shouting obscenities at Julian Fellowes’ soap-opera hack style of screenwriting.” — from Ralph Lauren Fall 2012, at Hello, Tailor.

(via hellotailor)

First electricity now telephones. Sometimes I feel as if I were living in an H.G. Wells novel.

(Source: sundaywithoutdownton, via lostsplendor)

suicideblonde:

Dan Stevens and Michelle Dockery photographed by Robert Trachtenberg for Entertainment Weekly, January 2012

suicideblonde:

Dan Stevens and Michelle Dockery photographed by Robert Trachtenberg for Entertainment Weekly, January 2012

(via pieces-of-emilie)

turner-d-century:

philnoto:

Lady Mary Crawley

Downton Abbey fanart by Phil Noto.

turner-d-century:

philnoto:

Lady Mary Crawley

Downton Abbey fanart by Phil Noto.

librarygoddess:

This is great! I loved Edith Wharton and her NY. What an interesting time in America and in England. Things were so different and we didn’t have the Kardashians but there was still scandal!

Elizabeth von Arnim in Downton Abbey

nyrbclassics:

We know we are jumping on the bandwagon, but we couldn’t resist. The New York Times ran a piece about the publishing world’s eager reaction to Downton Abbey, and we just had to chime in with our own related author. In the first episode of the new season the odious Molesley presents a book to the virtuous servant Anna in hopes that it will win her over. The book is Elizabeth von Arnim’s Elizabeth and her German Garden, an autobiographical novel about her life with Count Henning August von Arnim-Schlagenthin, who does not come out very well in the book and who later she would called the ‘Man of Wrath’. (Von Arnim was also first cousin of Katherine Mansfield, later married Lord Frances Stanley Russell, older brother of Bertrand Russell, and was the mistress of H.G. Wells).

The book was a huge success when published in 1891, and after she would sign her books as “By the author of Elizabeth and her German Garden” or just “By Elizabeth.” One of these later books is our The Enchanted April, which the Times Literary Supplement described thus: “The Enchanted April sounds as if it would be an appallingly cloying cream puff of a fairy tale, but that would be to ignore that the author habitually kept a pot of lemon juice mixed with vinegar beside her ink-pot.” If you have the Downton Abbey fever check it out; if you are sick about hearing about Downton Abbey, forgive us; if you are still interested in von Arnim read this recent piece from The Independent.

Downton Abbey

(Source: osloyne, via itsdelovely)

youreadarlingandiloveyou:

Sybil: lol, branson sent me nudes again
Edith: pardon? i couldn’t hear you over sir anthony strallen’s voicemail. except he doesn’t really know how it works quite yet, so it’s just him asking his maid how to hang up…

youreadarlingandiloveyou:

Sybil: lol, branson sent me nudes again

Edith: pardon? i couldn’t hear you over sir anthony strallen’s voicemail. except he doesn’t really know how it works quite yet, so it’s just him asking his maid how to hang up…

(Source: zap-saidthelady)