Hookland 2/8/19 7:17:20

@TwitchyWitch17 @rose_sinister @_PenguinFlight @SelineSigil9 @VVVamp @DarkWynter @freya_cw @NinaAntonia13 @goth_librarian @Krisxquiz @GothGirlVonDark @lilithepunk In every sub-culture there is always an ersatz element that mistake externals as manifesto.

Hookland 2/8/19 17:45:42

It is not uncommon to find abandoned freight cars along the old railyway lines made into phantom limbs by Dr. Beeching’s butchery. It is less common to find one adorned with witch wards. – #MattAdams, 1981 https://t.co/I0YTFlXtls

Hookland 2/8/19 20:09:23

It was a busy day yesterday. Lamas, Hookland’s official birthday, @circusking bringing out his second county record and the Puck Fairs started. They are still going strong. https://t.co/dfKdNp1Hhl

Hookland 2/8/19 21:29:44

‰ÛÏHow was London guv?‰Û ‰ÛÏFull of frozen bronze horses with their silent twats atop. Even more bent bastards than round here. Glad to be home if I am honest.‰Û – #DICallaghan

Hookland 2/8/19 23:56:56

@dmarto2 @azrael2393 You know what the height of the 1960s English psychedelia were like. Egyptian and Tibetan Books of the Dead in every grey long-coat alongside a nicotine-stained copy of The Lord of the Rings. It was only a matter of time before one of the bands wrote an LP and a manifesto …

Hookland 2/8/19 23:59:03

@dmarto2 @azrael2393 … entitled The English Book of the Dead. You know what witchcraft was like in England in the early 1970s. Any snappy title co-opted to brand a paperback faux cunning bible. And Hookland as county, always had a lot of intersection between psychedelic pop and witchcraft.

Hookland 2/7/19 1:54:05

@gjkendall Sorry to hear that. Grief is a bastard and it comes with no calendar. As for the awfulness, keep on being you, doing what you do. You are the best antidote to it.

Hookland 2/7/19 2:14:53

@JoolzDenby @catvincent He is so blatant in his racism elsewhere, I am not entirely sold, as he reaches for it so often. They have always reminded me somewhat of the Welsh ‰Û÷water-leapers‰Ûª That So plagued fisherman back in the high tide of folklore.