discover and growing

It is on my mind to mazauke a solid and quiet walk-around set up for reasons of inhabituation of the land here newly discovered to have become my own and having the credential to agree with my duties and rights to keep in the sedentary seat that is the mine about theme’s of forgotten reader’s account the one I do represent brought with in the vailliants left to me when I was set to take in the informal rights of leadership in a land untill then not whistled or begot by humanitarian hands of guidance and the forthcoming persequential terrencussions about refreaency and courteous protovision. I didn’t see anything coming up in the landscape proving me a different preceeding could be more wise or better to result in what I am looking for: a homeland for a country me belonging. As a matter of fact there was some cattle attrackting my attention, foliage, some sheep, a goat or two and some hares and other little slowcheeks, but all of them I leave untouched for now by handmarks I can too provide for, my fine result for getting me a prey for hunting around is wisted in to cut me the wood to make a lyre, the strings I take later from the sheep that gives me bowles after I slaughterd the animal to serve as a first ransom, I’ll dry the meats on this white sands covering the little hill I am sitting on and look over the valleys around here. My crew that shipped me overseas got me to this point for a well manageable start. All standing in this sands greeted me for a farewell giving over the blessing for all our folks who gathered in the new castle at the harbor we set out to bring us over the grey waves of north sea to pray the Lord to give them certain gracious priviledge grants saving my life and for any reason given in the next years to join us for ireneas rescents soon in good and manly health so dominant in my family and bound me to the oath to represent the Durlean banner smart and brightly looking and upright. At last this is the tallin told they bring me on this overthere b’cause they loved me well and just for reason that the one our Duncal is they said is once so good a mother’s fairest gam, this shy boathands were too opinioned better this bestoance would it become for all this time in the heats and theats a good strongharted like his possesion is and up so more well mannered son of Durleany is tolkind’s old: ‘don’t stay in Reaginmoor Castle for more than what the charms are giving to serve for a youth so well, discover you better a good world away from walls soon broken through than whaving up in the meadowlands the shores of River Forth gave for the end up of the well done stage to get out of the trunks of Laming all this skilling for the well planned and the pleasant hunts. By highest order you are brought here oversea’s where different wings will bring the beholds of what then is in the present, our lands do bind you on your cheeky smile you’re assistance is not balancing the redemands of respect to your father’s vailliant promis twaill and the tweeds of  morals will not slave the froments of the same like you, to acknow your eldest brotther claimed the samed seat of defence of Reaginmoor his talliant vows will need him in the season following this summer time.’ So well were given this good words that me came up full tears in both my eyes, this has been toldy by my mother’s servant. So let me God we always served so well, who’s land greeted us this day of Holy Virgin’s blessing up to heavenly bequeeth to help me shave by this bone guiding’s grace, and make us my intention for a talky walk rounding a good result of answer and suppliance to comfort every well intentioned confess we did tsion ever in the abbeen so modone to a Reaginmoor ear, and such is prey by praying for our Lord so far. Nobody, I preach this way to Holy Mary’s new year’s angel, will be in the haered tasking who waits us in a gainfrown and will road us in the pass to say a fair ‘hella and here we are’ . Seen this with cowdy hand this do my fingers cit the keys theady the sandy coast of herethow sands thears is my confident word to giggy save a reader twear and justice for the reason youth is new who shelved this wave so ruling lines thus sent for, me rests the buzzards glow and duskind’s custom of the prow as redignitied without the doalan preave askin the mozzal fisty buss my family has been all covered with the silence due an hue. / – set out in the worpress bottle and corked with the fuzzy twist all things end well once started well – this is the clen and mounted sean the minutes counting he could leave alone so writing us the Goergy lords as well//Cl5*7%harpery/BBCC hum/home device in 7 twarts of windows glears/Ll.Ff.Hfl 100 points/mark seanclen/4/28oC/

grees
There are many galaxies in the Universe and although there is plenty of room, they tend to stick together. The Milky Way, for example, is part of a large gathering of over fifty galaxies known as the Local Group. Galaxy groups like this come together to form even larger groups called clusters which can congregate further still to create mammoth superclusters. The sphere of space surrounding our galaxy is known as the Local Volume, a region some 35 million light-years in diameter and home to several hundred known galaxies. The subject of this new NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image, a beautiful dwarf irregular galaxy known as PGC 18431, is one of these galaxies. This image shows PGC 18431 smudged across the sky, but it wasn’t imaged purely for its looks. These Hubble observations were gathered in order to probe how Local Volume galaxies cluster together and move around. Hubble’s high resolution allows astronomers to explore star populations within these moderately distant galaxies — specifically, stars known as tip of the red-giant branch stars — in order to get an idea of the galaxy’s composition and, crucially, its distance from us. Knowing galactic distances enables us to accurately map a galaxy sample in three dimensions, a method key to understanding more about our cosmic neighbours, and to dismiss perspective and line-of-sight illusions.