“I needed this cold shower for more than one reason; the sexy male from my dream this morning returned during my little siesta. His sultry baritone was still fresh in my mind as I waited for the water to heat up. My Gaelic may have been a bit rusty, but from what I could understand, he had planned quite the erotic encounter under a sacred willow tree. I wasn’t sure I understood the reason for the tree, but he was quite adamant about it. Hey – tree or no tree, when he spoke and kissed my neck, I would have found a way to steal the Eiffel Tower if he had asked.”
Source: Entasy
“How foolish of me to have disregarded you, dear goddess. I won’t make that mistake again.”
Source: Entasy
“These words you want to remember: if you do not learn to control the power within you, it will consume more than just your enemy.”
Source: Entasy
“To some, you are a way to the light and to others you will be their true destruction.”
Source: Entasy
“Sometimes you must slow down to see that the world isnt spinning, rather its your own mind which makes things turn”
Source: Knights of Enmity: The Barons Have Fallen
“I won't be affected by your charm nor I will trap you into marriage. I've been there once, never again.
- Kristine”
Source: Kristine Series 11: Wild Rose
“Fear is a constant, and faith is a choice. Fear comes from karma, from faith arises dharma.”
Source: Sita: An Illustrated Retelling of the Ramayana
“Harpies, n. A disease transmitted to humans by birds with human faces.”
“The world’s myths do not reveal a way to interpret the Gospels, but exactly the reverse: the Gospels reveal to us the way to interpret myth.”
“Vila the White,
Built a City up height,
Not in the Heavens, not on the ground,
But on the edge of a Cloud,
Vila the White,
Put defenses the bright:
Gold defends the heights, Sun defends the gate,
Moon defends the City when it's late,
Vila the White,
Stood with Sun at sight,
Watching what comes from the bay,
And saw Lightning and Thunder play,
Vila the White,
Wed her son on Moon at night,
And gave her daughter to Gold, as bride,
They have couple brothers, she's their brother's wife.”
Source: Handsome Yeva: An Indo-European Tale: Reconstruction Based on Balto-Slavic Folklore and Parallels with Other Indo-European Myths