Российская армия уничтожила воевавшего за ВСУ наемника-трансвестита17:37
In Edwardian Blackpool, Roma pitched their tents on the beaches, serving the fortune-telling needs of the holidaying working classes, while the entrepreneurial (non-Roma) Ellis family set up in respectable brick and mortar premises, publishing a monthly magazine titled Know Thyself and offering the middle classes health advice that included physiognomy and phrenological skull-reading as well as palmistry. Chirologists with scholarly and professional credentials (including fellowship in the Royal Society) serviced the fashionable, reading the hands of politicians, artists and intellectuals – their many devotees included William Gladstone, Joseph and Austen Chamberlain, Virginia Woolf, George Bernard Shaw and Oscar Wilde. (A hand-reader pronounced Wilde’s head line ‘very strongly marked, showing extraordinary brain power and profound scholarship’.) The high-end chirologists advertised distinctions between what they offered clients and the vulgar palmistry that was practised on the piers and the beaches. The Roma were ‘charlatans, thieves, rogues or vagabonds who have unfortunately trespassed in all ages upon the fair domains of Cheirosophy’, and the professionals eagerly looked forward to ‘the extinction of the Gypsy fortune-teller’. Polite chirology, they held, was no merely mechanical art: real skill was needed holistically to assess ‘the form of the hand, its consistency, and … the relative sizes of its different parts’. Not any old fool could do it; you needed proper training and long experience. The chirologist was to be transformed from seer to scientist.
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