Malone 

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  • A waterfall at Lake Malone State Park in western Kentucky.

  • ‘She wheels her wheelbarrow through streets wide and narrow’ ... I couldn’t help thinking of sweet Molly Malone when I came across this street trader plying her trade (selling strawberries for 1 euro per box) in Dublins streets wide and narrow …

  • Taken at a friends land in Wimberley, Texas. Most of the time the creekbed is dry, but we had a rainy season.

  • this is my friends daughter Molly shot has hdr with orton filter

  • seaside/shells tee … molly malone tee …

  • Molly Malone statue off Grafton St, Dublin.

  • Molly Malone statue by night off Grafton St, Dublin.

  • the starting 5 for the dream team – that’s just unfair!

  • Auckland’s Chancery Lane has several high-end boutiques, including the English perfumery Jo Malone and Tolaga Bay Cashmere. This cashmere is from New Zealand goats specially selected and bred to produce the finest, most luxurious product possible.

  • Guess what I got for Christmas!! 90 Rembradt Soft Pastels Hopefully you can tell who the child star is, even though she’s grown up now!! Soft pastels on 220gsm 297×420mm Canson “C” a grain

  • Malone Officially known as Kennebecasis River No. 23, it spans the Kennebecasis River on the Goshen Road, 7 km. east of Route 114. Thirty km. east of Sussex, New Brunswick, Canada. Length 64 feet, built in 1910. Canada’s Atlantic Province of New Brunswick is famous for it’s covered bridges, the longest covered bridge in the world is located in this province. There are 68 covered bridges left in the province. Some are still serving their intended purpose while others are no longer in service but stand as reminders of quieter, simpler times. / Why cover a bridge with a roof and boarded in sides? The cover protected the timbers from the rotting effects of sun and rain. A covered bridge has a life expectancy of 80 years or more while an uncovered bridge could only expect to be serviceable for 10 or 20 years. They proved to be a practical solution in this land of many rivers and streams and an abundant supply of timber.

  • Malone Officially known as Kennebecasis River No. 23, it spans the Kennebecasis River on the Goshen Road, 7 km. east of Route 114. Thirty km. east of Sussex, New Brunswick, Canada. Length 64 feet, built in 1910. Canada’s Atlantic Province of New Brunswick is famous for it’s covered bridges, the longest covered bridge in the world is located in this province. There are 68 covered bridges left in the province. Some are still serving their intended purpose while others are no longer in service but stand as reminders of quieter, simpler times. / Why cover a bridge with a roof and boarded in sides? The cover protected the timbers from the rotting effects of sun and rain. A covered bridge has a life expectancy of 80 years or more while an uncovered bridge could only expect to be serviceable for 10 or 20 years. They proved to be a practical solution in this land of many rivers and streams and an abundant supply of timber.

  • / “Molly Malone” (also known as “Cockles and Mussels” or “In Dublin’s Fair City”) is a popular song, set in Dublin, Ireland, which has become the unofficial anthem of Dublin City. It has also in Ireland acquired the status of an Irish anthem. The song is sung by supporters of Dublin GAA, Leinster Rugby teams, Plymouth Argyle, Gillingham FC and the Irish international rugby team. It was also featured in the film, A Clockwork Orange. / The song tells the tale of a beautiful fishmonger who plied her trade on the streets of Dublin, but who died young, of a fever. Recently a legend has grown up that there was a historical Molly, representing her variously as a hawker by day and part-time prostitute by night, or – in contrast – as one of the few chaste female street-hawkers of her day. However, there is no evidence that the song is based on a real woman who lived in the 17th century, or at any other time, despite claims that records of her birth and death have been located. The name “Molly” originated as a familiar version of the names Mary and Margaret. While many such “Molly” Malones were born in Dublin over the centuries, no evidence connects any of them to the events in the song.[1] The song was not recorded earlier than 1883, in Cambridge, Massachusetts,[2] and it was published (by Francis Brothers and Day, 1884, London) as a work written and composed by James Yorkston, of Edinburgh.[3] / Frank Harte, one of the great Dublin singers, who also sang this song, used to say: “Never judge a song by the company it keeps!” / The song is in a familiar tragi-comic mode popular in this period, probably influenced by earlier songs with a similar theme, such as Percy Montross’s “My Darling Clementine”, which was written circa 1880. / Information taken from Wikipedia, and free encyclopedia.

  • Molly Malone

  • A drawing I did of the girls from the popular video game The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time.

  • In 2008 prior to my deployment to Afghanistan I was asked to be a production photographer for this movie.”The Messenger “makes its Regional Premiere on 25 Oct 2009 at the Austin Film Festival. / The directorial debut of accomplished screenwriter Oren Moverman, whose credits include I’m Not There and Jesus’ Son, tells the story of two soldiers from different generations who are assigned to inform the ‘next of kin.’

  • "Molly Malone" (also known as "Cockles and Mussels" or "In Dublin’s Fair City")(Irish: Mol Ní Mhaoileoin) is a popular song, set in Dublin, Ireland, which has become the unofficial anthem of Dublin City. It has also in Ireland acquired the status of an Irish anthem. Molly is commemorated in a statue designed by Jeanne Rynhart, erected to celebrate the city’s first millennium in 1987. Placed at the top of Grafton Street in Dublin, this statue is known colloquially as "The Tart With The Cart," "The Dish With The Fish," and "The Trollop With The Scallops." The statue portrays Molly as a busty young woman in seventeenth-century dress. Her low-cut dress and large breasts were justified on the grounds that as "women breastfed publicly in Molly’s time, breasts were popped out all over the place." Molly Malone statue in Grafton Street, was unveiled by then Lord Mayor of Dublin, Alderman Ben Briscoe during 1988 the Dublin Millennium celebrations, declaring June 13 as Molly Malone Day.

  • The above photo is one of a few war memorials of the 1916 Easter Uprising that occured in Dublin, Ireland. A wall plaque in memory of Michael Malone has been erected in No. 25 Northumberland Roadi in Ballsbridge, Dublin by Oglaigh na hEireann. The Easter Rebellion, was an armed uprising of Irish nationalists against the rule of Great Britain in Ireland. The uprising occurred on Easter Monday, April 24, 1916, and centred mainly in Dublin. The chief objectives were the attainment of political freedom and the establishment of an Irish republic.

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