Patrick Is A Tiny Man With The Hugest Vocal Range Ever. It's Headfirst Slide Into Cooperstown And Then

patrick is a tiny man with the hugest vocal range ever. it's headfirst slide into cooperstown and then it's novocaine ???

More Posts from Xzenythx and Others

9 months ago
Can We Just Take A Moment To Applaud Dean Winchester’s Amazing Research Skills

can we just take a moment to applaud dean winchester’s amazing research skills

1 year ago

neither alive nor dead but a secret third thing (at sea)

7 months ago
Agia Sofia Cave, Greece
Agia Sofia Cave, Greece
Agia Sofia Cave, Greece
Agia Sofia Cave, Greece

Agia Sofia cave, Greece

9 months ago

Pretty boys pretty eyes

6 months ago

i always forget how much of a hell getting up in the morning during the cold months is until im trying to get dressed taking frost damage like ough augh ugha oagh uagh

9 months ago
ALWAYS Great To Warm Up!!!!!!
ALWAYS Great To Warm Up!!!!!!
ALWAYS Great To Warm Up!!!!!!

ALWAYS Great to warm up!!!!!!

6 months ago
Art By Ann-Sofie Vejs
Art By Ann-Sofie Vejs
Art By Ann-Sofie Vejs

Art by Ann-Sofie Vejs

1 month ago

Women at Sea

Women at sea or women in general in connection with the navy are unfortunately still a rather neglected topic, and so Margarette Lincoln, herself an author on this topic, once looked at the literature on this subject.  Here is the list she compiled and which I would like to pass on to you, as there are a few that deal with this topic.

- Bold in her Breeches: Women Pirates Across the Ages by Jo Stanley (1995) - The basic work that covers all women pirates through the centuries and geographically from Ireland to China.

- Female Tars: Women aboard Ship in the Age of Sail by Suzanne J. Stark ( 1996) - She deals in her book with three types of women on board, the whores, the officers’ wives and women in male disguise.

- Heroines and Harlots: Women at sea in the great age of sail, by David Cordingly (2001) - he looked at the archive material and was able to confirm that there were a very large number of women in England and America who went to sea. He also tries to include the role of men.

-British Sea Power: Representing the Navy, 1750-1815 by Margarette Lincoln (2002) - here she included a whole chapter devoted to how women saw the Navy. She continued this with her next book - Naval Wives and Mistresses (2007) and now tried to include letters and the social role.

- Naval Families : War and Duty in Britain. 1740- 1820 by Ellen Gills (2016) - Here individual families and their fates are highlighted.

- Enterprising Women and Shipping in the 19th century, by Helen Doe (2009) - She stays ashore in her book and highlights the maritime business in women’s hands.

- Sailors and Traders: a Maritime History of the Pacific Peoples, by Alastair Couper ( 2009) - Explores the sexual relationships of European sailors and indigenous South Sea island women in the 18th and 19th centuries. It also makes a connection to the whalers and the recruitment of almost exclusively female crews in the 20th century.

- From Cabin Boys to Captains- 250 years of women at sea, by Jo Stanley (2016) - Here she now reports on the life and work of female sailors.

- Pirate Women: The Princesses, Prostitutes and Privateers who ruled the seven seas, by Laura Sook Duncombe (2017) attempts to shed light on the lives of female pirates.

- Women and english piracy, 1540- 1720 : Partners and Victims of Crime, by John Appleby (2013) - moves away from the romanticised lives of female pirates and shows how women supported pirates and even started their own businesses. He also tried to dispel some of the myths.

This small list shows how little work has been done on this topic, although there are some small articles on individuals that have gradually appeared in naval history magazines. There is still a lot to be done in this area and more research is needed.

3 weeks ago

gay tool be like this buddy holding me

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xzenythx - more sun for the dead!
more sun for the dead!

☆ they / she ☆ 19 ☆ i like mychem & pirates ☆ art acc: @xcrcf1xxx

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