stanza my stone

Emma—intern at Melville House; staff writer at The Female Gaze; contributor to Birdfeast, Two Serious Ladies, Used Furniture Review, Vinyl, Handsome, Keep This Bag Away from Children, etc.

Writing site

Latest writing:
- "Tiny Beautiful Things by Cheryl Strayed" at The Female Gaze
- "Quarter-Sonnet" and "Selvage" at Keep This Bag Away from Children
- "Fond" at Vinyl
- "You in California" at The Juvenilia
“Like almost everyone else, Pat English dreamed of being famous. But two years ago she was merely a pretty 15-year-old kid at Bayside (N.Y.) High School, and the chances for fame seemed small indeed. Then one day she read an exciting account of how the great Clyde Beatty was opening a school at Fort Lauderdale, Fla. for girl lion trainers. She immediately registered. Pat was one of ten girls who started the course. Eight of them quit the first time they ever saw a lion. Another quit when she saw the lions chew up a mule. Only Pat was left to learn how to use the whip, gun and kitchen chair with which lion tamers overawe their animals. On her second day alone in the cage she was almost clawed to death. Stepping backward, she fell over a block of wood. Only the prompt appearance of Beatty saved her. Today Pat is 17 and a first-rate lion trainer.” —LIFE Magazine, June 22, 1940

“Like almost everyone else, Pat English dreamed of being famous. But two years ago she was merely a pretty 15-year-old kid at Bayside (N.Y.) High School, and the chances for fame seemed small indeed. Then one day she read an exciting account of how the great Clyde Beatty was opening a school at Fort Lauderdale, Fla. for girl lion trainers. She immediately registered. Pat was one of ten girls who started the course. Eight of them quit the first time they ever saw a lion. Another quit when she saw the lions chew up a mule. Only Pat was left to learn how to use the whip, gun and kitchen chair with which lion tamers overawe their animals. On her second day alone in the cage she was almost clawed to death. Stepping backward, she fell over a block of wood. Only the prompt appearance of Beatty saved her. Today Pat is 17 and a first-rate lion trainer.” —LIFE Magazine, June 22, 1940

  1. mustards reblogged this from leopoldgursky
  2. walking-two-moons reblogged this from iwantmyurlbacktwat
  3. pompocky reblogged this from intricate-perception
  4. iwantmyurlbacktwat reblogged this from intricate-perception
  5. intricate-perception reblogged this from abeetlesblog
  6. abeetlesblog reblogged this from leopoldgursky
  7. noregretscoyote reblogged this from leopoldgursky
  8. taliceinwonderland reblogged this from napolean-bonerparty
  9. napolean-bonerparty reblogged this from leopoldgursky
  10. latenightcigarettes reblogged this from leopoldgursky
  11. colewardell reblogged this from leopoldgursky
  12. jessica-lynne reblogged this from leopoldgursky
  13. frannyglassed reblogged this from leopoldgursky
  14. stotter reblogged this from leopoldgursky
  15. thelucidword reblogged this from leopoldgursky
  16. leopoldgursky posted this