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Sunday, April 19, 2020

The killer inside Vincent Van Goah

 ..He told Henri about his life in Arles.. While he spoke his eyes flashed their messages to his brain. Yes, it was Vincent but a different Vincent....

Van Gogh in Arles, France. Vincent lived in Arles in the South of France for more than a year. He experienced great productivity there before suffering from a mental breakdown.Vincent arrived in Arles on 20 February 1888.
        Quiet, cowed, with dull, haunted eyes...No portfolio, no gourd of rum, the equivalent of smell and taste like burgundy, she told Henri about his life in Tombstone, Arizona. The year of 1881. Spent in the field under the boiling sun, painting withe frenzy of madness


The staggering walked back to town at sunset over dusty country
The Gunfight at the O.K. Corral was a 30-second shootout betweenlawmen and members of a loosely organized group of outlaws called theCowboys that took place at about 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, October 26, 1881, in TombstoneArizona Territory. It is generally regarded as the most famous shootout in the history of the American Wild West. The gunfight was the result of a long-simmering feud, with Cowboys Billy ClaiborneIkeand Billy Clanton, and Tom and Frank McLaury on one side and town Marshal Virgil EarpSpecial Policeman Morgan Earp, Special PolicemanWyatt Earp, and temporary policeman Doc Holliday on the other side. Billy Clanton and both McLaury brothers were killed. Ike Clanton, Billy Claiborne, and Wes Fuller ran from the fight. Virgil, Morgan, and Doc Holliday were wounded, but Wyatt Earp was unharmed. Wyatt is often erroneously regarded as the central figure in the shootout, although his brother Virgilwas Tombstone city marshal and deputy U.S. marshal that day and had far more experience as a sheriff, constable, marshal, and soldier in combat.The gunfight was not the end of the conflict. On December 28, 1881, Virgil Earp was ambushed and maimed in a murder attempt by the Cowboys. On March 18, 1882, a Cowboy fired from a dark alley through the glass door of a Campbell & Hatch's saloon and billiard parlor, killing Morgan Earp.Despite its name, the gunfight did not take place within or next to the O.K. Corral, which fronted Allen Street and had a rear entrance lined with horse stalls on Fremont Street. The shootout actually took place in a narrow lot on the side of C. S. Fly's Photographic Studio on Fremont Street, six doors west of the O.K. Corral's rear entrance. Some members of the two opposing parties were initially only about 6 feet apart. About 30 shots were fired in 30 seconds.[Ike Clanton subsequently filed murder charges against the Earps and Doc Holliday. After a 30-day preliminary hearing and a brief stint in jail, the lawmen were shown to have acted within the law.
Then Gauguin' s  long awaited arrival, the happy relationship was on the first days, their trip to gether to Avignon.
then back in Arles have had the first quarrels.

the argument degenerating into brawls; the recocilliations in absinthe Such as devil spirits, spirit withdrawal spirits , Or the green goddess ... is in French. But has a derivation of the word ABSINTHIUM which is Latin Which has the meaning to be insulting but inviting to challenge that "Never drinkable"! Finally the crack up, the glass of absinthe flung into Guaguin's face., the scuffle, the murderous rage. Gymbal crashing in  his head. His brain staring in whirl in his skull, the temporary madness when the walls shook before his eyes, and the floor rocked under his feet. The razor;the slash of his ear, the tramp to the brothel in the night with the grusome gift of fresh wrapped in a newspaper. Then he return with the blood dripping to the hotel and atlast the epileptic fit. He collasped on the floor. Theo rushed down to P and arranged him to be taken to the asylum at St. Remy. From Russia the disease reached Europe, spreading across it in 3 consecutive waves (1889–1890, 1890–1891, and 1891–1892), differing in terms of morbidity and mortality. Changes that took place in the nineteenth century fostered the rapid spread of the disease. Substantial increase in the population, especially in towns, facilitated the expansion of infectious diseases transmitted from person to person. The intensive development of railways also contributed to this effect because they linked distant places, with numerous intermediate stops, and enabled large numbers of people to travel within a short time and across vast distances. The impact of new ways of travelling on the spread of infectious diseases was noticed by some people relatively early. It was Parsons, mentioned above, that stated that influenza first appeared in the capitals (the cities best connected with one another) and in port cities. He denied the possibility that influenza could travel faster than people and that people staying in isolated places could develop it. This statement shed light on the way in which the disease spread. The cause of influenza had been unknown and it provoked debates as to whether the disease was infectious and whether it was caused by microorganisms transmitted from person to person (germ theory) or by miasma (miasmatic theory). In spite of the advances in microbiology, researchers of the late nineteenth century, such as Charles Creighton in his work entitled The History of Epidemic 1891–1894, were trying to prove the miasmatic theory 





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