Thursday, November 18, 2010

A Message For Christening Card

snapdragons and lion penis


Back from vacation in the Argolid and Arcadia is actually an overwhelming number of reports of Venetian lions! Especially in Nauplio (Nafplio), which indeed an important role in ne d He history of Venetian played colonies. But I collect really no lion, not really, therefore, briefly only two performances on substantive grounds.


number 1 is set to the central Platia, d em Compose u n gsplatz, and has a decorated foot. The finest Venetian lion's mouth at all.
I imagine: a little Greek child sits at the very low base of the relief and I watch his brothers at the footbal
sportive one (it is always played football au f the Constitutional Court, is also found on a morning walk before 7 clock ever get the Jackets, who have forgotten the guys on the night stand) and has a bottle of love beads - which might better think of him than with acute Q ingerchen love beads in the to fumble holes that represent the lion's whiskers? And tidy with the thumbs firmly push? That must have been very satisfying, a creative act


number 2 is around the corner, in Precooking ten large Aga Pasha Mosc hee (later the first House of Parliament of Greece now below contemporary art, top Kon zerthalle) and h at, next to a beautiful halo, a penis.
to be normal, but not for a Venetian lion animal as a symbol of San Marco, as a status symbol and power of the Serenissima no banalities, such as reproduction is subjected! (Very confused, I was looking for lion penises and think actually,
that Venetian lions have pretty curls on the belly, but generally did not penises.) Un d seems this copy to be circumcised.

Perhaps a more satisfactory
creative act? Private or perhaps more formally? Degradation of a state symbol by attaching a religious styled sex organ? Once sensitized, I have found several other specimens, such as the entrance to the huge Venetian fortress Palamidi . And the simple acts clearly faked and subsequently adds decorative.


Nauplio, the city of HUMMER Venetian lion? A riddle! Contributions to its solution, contact us via comment or email, thank you!

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