Edgar Allan Poe : The Complete Collection of Poems
Emily Brontë : The Complete Collection of Poems
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow : “Haunted Houses”
Dana Levin : “ Styx”
William Blake : “ The Marriage of Heaven and Hell” / “A Divine Image”
Margaret Atwood : “Mushrooms”
Jorge Luis Borges : “Two English Poems”
Frank Bidart : “The Ghost”
María Negroni : “Rosamundi“
Anne Carson : “The Glass Essay”
Emily Dickinson : The Complete Collection of Poems
Jericho Brown : “Dear Dr. Frankenstein”
Sylvia Plath : “ Lady Lazarus” / “Ariel” / “Fever 103°”
Hughes Mearns : “Antigonish [I met a man who wasn’t there]”
Robert Lowell : “Florence”
Gregory Orr : “Gathering the Bones Together“
Paisley Rekdal : “Bats”
Remain an enigma, talk less about yourself. In social situations, make it a game, even if you are a rather social person, to shroud yourself in mystery. If others show interest in you, answer vaguely. Disappear at specific times. Reveal little of your background. When you do speak, speak in riddles or quotes. That isn’t to say you should never speak up in class or in debates, have opinions and remain socially active; however, keep people guessing a lot of the time, and, if you’re really into it, only speak when spoken to.
Wear vintage clothes, elegant accessories, monochrome colors. Emphasize sharp features with purely dark or light colors and jewel tones. I usually find nice vintage clothes at random thrift stores. Keep an open mind.
Listen to jazz and classical music. Listening to older, more tasteful music brings a spark of elegance to your life. I, personally, like to hear the used jazz vinyls crackle. There are multiple types of dark academia; to me, jazz demonstrates the erratic artist spirit of revolutionaries, while classical music possesses me with the sophisticated spirit of a Classicist who has preparing tea down to a science.
Light candles. Doing things such as writing, reading, and getting ready for bed by candlelight makes it seem thrice as elegant and academic… going to sleep so late never looked so enticing. On the other hand, you could wake up before dawn, light some candles, and study or read.
Stay ahead in school. Read your textbooks ahead of time, write essays about anything you’d like at all, just for practice. If you’re learning about something in science, devise experiments to illustrate the concepts to yourself and make them easy to remember. If you’re reading a book in English, read a handful of articles about the author beforehand to prepare, write down quotes from the book, make essay pitches, write to your heart’s content a critique of the book, an analysis of the book, of gender roles in the book. In history courses, find articles about the subject matter, annotate them, and write about them. If you’re taking a math class, devise applications of the concepts and solve problems of your own creation.
Go to libraries, museums, bookshops, and coffee shops. These are all really good places to sit in the corner and read for hours on end. Not only do you get Mysterious Points but you get an aesthetic environment and (hopefully) some peace in which to devour literature. I know that in the upcoming term, I’m going to be in the library from opening time to closing time every day.
Make Ancient Roman or Greek food. To be honest, the food was of so much better quality than it often is today, so I would suggest looking into some ancient cuisine archives to look for some recipes for your dinner party. Not only is it most of the time much better than modern food, but it’s also much more elegant. Not to mention it is fun and enlightening to try recipes which are perhaps completely foreign to you.
Have routines. Perhaps your life is erratic, but you can feel some semblance of order and elegance by creating rituals for, perhaps, everything. You might start the day off with a walk around the neighborhood or a nearby pond. I start my writing sessions by 1) playing jazz 2)opening my windows 3)reading Belief and Technique for Modern Prose 4)chugging a whole glass of water really fast 5) breathing violently. Feel free to make up really weird Winding Down routines, like, I don’t know, closing all your windows, stripping down, and meditating for 20 minutes before you go to sleep. Literally anything. It doesn’t even have to be useful, it just has to be strange.
Hang stuff up on your walls. Postcards, paintings, drawings, poetry, snippets from books, moodboards, your routines, lists (places you want to go, people you want to meet, things you want to do), playlists. Make it yourself and make it chaotic and, most importantly, make it aesthetic.
READ. Read anything and everything educational. Do it. Just, don’t pick up your phone for 3 days because you’re reading, just ignore everything else. Good things to read would be: feminist literature, nonfiction, mystery novels, Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier…
Kallikteros, tr. by Willis Barnstone, from Greek Lyric Poetry; “A Way to the Heart,”
“Dionysus is a god who takes human form, a powerful male who looks soft and feminine, a native of Thebes who dresses as a foreigner. His parentage is mixed between divine and human; he is and is not a citizen of Thebes; his power has both feminine and masculine aspects. He does not merely cross boundaries, he blurs and confounds them, makes nonsense of the lines between Greek and foreign, between female and male, between powerful and weak, between savage and civilized. He is the god of both tragedy and comedy, and in his presence the distinction between them falls away, as both comedy and tragedy…”
— Paul Woodruff, The Bacchae (Translated and Annotated)
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English literature academia aesthetic appreciation post.
I just want a girlfriend and go to the library with her, discuss poetry and philosophy, have dates in cute cafes, just sit in silence and read books, cuddle while we watch old movies at 3am in the morning, visit art museums, take long walks in the park holding hands and talk about mythology. Is that really too much to ask for?
“wild geese” from dream work by mary oliver, may 1986
spring is not gentle
trembling towards tomorrow
trepidation of love now renewed;
it is a scab scraped over winter
and its bloody, weeping wounds.
Octobre
Yoga
Cheveux
Mer
Le marché de noel
Le bricolage
La mort
Le tribunal
La voiture
Ecriture inclusive
Space
La guerre
Vocabulaire du jour 1
Vocabulaire du jour 2
Vocabulaire du jour 3
Vocabulaire du jour 4
Vocabulaire du jour 5
Vocabulaire du jour 6
Vocabulaire du jour 7
Vocabulaire du jour 8
Vocabulaire du jour 9
Vocabulaire du jour 10
La Mante S1 E1
La Mante S1 E2
La Mante S1 E3
La Mante S1 E4 and 5
La Mante S1 E6
Workout
Recap Vocab verbes
Recap Vocab adverbes
Recap Vocab adjectifs
Recap Vocab nouns
Study Vocab
Hockey
La casa de papel/ Money Heist
La casa de papel/ Money Heist season 5 episode 1
Random Vocab
Random Vocab 2
Télévision et film
Faire du camping
La cuisine
L’île mystérieuse part 1
L’île mystérieuse part 2
L’île mystérieuse part 3
Le tour du monde en 80 jours part 1
Le tour du monde en 80 jours part 2
Voyage au centre de la terre part 1
Voyage au centre de la terre part 2
Vingt mile lieues sous les mers
Le Horla
Science et recherche
Bel Ami chapitre 1
Bel Ami chapitre 2
Bel Ami chapitre 3
Bel Ami chapitre 4
Bel Ami chapitre 5
Bel Ami chapitre 6
Bel Ami chapitre 7
Bel Ami chapitre 8
Bel Ami 2.1
Bel Ami 2.2.
Bel Ami 2.3
Bel Ami 2.4
Bel Ami 2.5 + 2.6
Bel Ami 2.7
Bel Ami 2.8+2.9+2.10
Flaubert: Un coeur simple
Flaubert: La légende de Saint Julien
Flaubert: Hérodias
Nautical vocab in French
Au travail
L’environnement
La parure - Maupassant
Words I didn’t know in le Musée d’Orsay
Halloween
Les instruments
Les vêtements
Song translation masterlist/ Expressions masterlist / Grammar masterlist
u werent “born gay” u decided to be overly enthusiastic about hamlet in highschool english and that’s why you are the way u are
dark academia | xxi | ♂| INFJ-T | oct.24 — active
192 posts