すみれ狩り
4.7K posts

すみれ狩り
@sumiregari
主に シャーロック・ホームズ関連 と洋館建築 から始まったけど、赤毛のアン、ボートの三人男、サキ、グッドオーメンズも追加

シャーロッキアン同志諸君、東博で開催中の特別展『百万石!加賀前田家』の展示に、コナン・ドイルの書簡が展示されてるの知ってました?? 完全にノーマークで腰を抜かしそうになった。現地で見た方がいい!(SNS投稿可能エリア展示)

「シャーロック・ホームズ誕生にいたる、コナン・ドイルが紡いだ初期全作品――ミステリから怪奇・冒険・空想科学小説まで、想像力に満ちた多彩な作品を日記や自伝とともに…」 ⇒関矢悦子編著/熊谷彰 『コナン・ドイル初期作品世界 シャーロック・ホームズ誕生の道筋』 原書房 hanmoto.com/bd/isbn/978456…





This is how Rally drivers keep their visors crystal clear.... © interestingengineering



ホームズはちょっとした音楽通であることをよく匂わせるし、バイオリンでどんな曲でも弾いてみせる一方、まともに歌うシーンはない。社交嫌いなのであまり機会もないけど。(まさかおんch…) 歌手には一定の敬意を払うが、実際に歌っているシーンは悪党や酔っぱらいの下品な歌ばかり


Britain’s most unexpected craze wasn’t fashion. It was ferns. In the mid-1800s, collecting them turned into a national craze. People travelled across the country, climbing hillsides and combing woodlands in search of rare species. It was called Pteridomania. Literally fern madness. This was not just a hobby. It became a part of everyday life. Ferns appeared on wallpaper, ceramics, textiles, even ironwork. A simple plant became a cultural symbol. Some of the details are even stranger. Rare ferns could fetch high prices, and collectors guarded locations in secret. A few remote valleys were stripped almost bare by over-enthusiastic hunters. Special glass cases, known as Wardian cases, were invented so ferns could be grown indoors, even in smoke-filled Victorian cities. There were even fern “catalogues”, where species were listed, traded, and discussed with remarkable precision, long before modern hobby communities. At its height, fern collecting was not just fashionable. It was a national fixation and distinctly Victorian. Follow @oaksandlions for more interesting posts on British history. #BritishHistory #VictorianBritain #DidYouKnow

Have you ever finished a book and thought, “Okay, I’m reading everything this person writes”?


原則、許されないです








