@brick_car: Săn ngay săn ngay 😍#Brickcar #xuhuongtiktok

Brick Car
Brick Car
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Wednesday 22 October 2025 16:55:35 GMT
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_tranphuckhang_
Justwannasleep🌠✨ :
2026-07-05 16:07:33
0
hiu120401
Hiếu Hay Ho :
quá đẹp
2026-07-02 04:06:17
0
zzz986z
Zzzzzz :
Lego bán 7 triệu. Ông này bán 7 trăm 🤣
2025-11-16 16:54:07
0
nht.linh.fpg
Nhật Linh FPG :
8/10 với lego k nhỉ
2025-12-01 17:38:07
0
cheemsburger142
Lê Phương :
có kèm khung ko shop
2026-03-04 16:35:48
0
bawmj
Royal Bawmj :
Có loại động cơ ko anh
2025-12-17 14:17:38
0
phm_hung1109
hngphm :
@theein.huowgn_ bn ơi tặng mìh
2026-07-07 19:13:13
0
brick_car
Brick Car :
Hàng vừa cập bến , ae ưng đang có giá tốt nhá
2025-10-22 16:56:21
0
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This card is older than tarot by a thousand years. The Rota Fortunae, or Wheel of Fortune, is a symbol of the capricious nature of Fate  belonging to the goddess Fortuna. She spins it at random, changing the positions of those on the wheel: some suffer great misfortune, others gain windfalls. Fortuna’s name may derive from Vortumna: “she who revolves the year.”  The metaphor was already considered a cliché in ancient times. Tacitus complained about it.  The image was given its defining form by Boethius in The Consolation of Philosophy, written around 524 CE.  What most retellings leave out: Boethius was a Roman senator condemned to death by the Ostrogothic King Theodoric on charges of treason. He wrote his account of Fortune’s wheel from a prison cell. He was executed shortly after completing it. His book became one of the most widely read texts of the Middle Ages. King Alfred the Great translated it into Anglo-Saxon. Shakespeare drew on it in both Hamlet and King Lear. Chaucer referenced it in The Canterbury Tales.  Thomas More is said to have read it before his own execution. In Waite’s 1909 design, the letters T-A-R-O appear on the wheel clockwise. Read counterclockwise, the same letters spell R-O-T-A: the Latin word for “wheel.”  Waite drew the design partly from the vision of Ezekiel: wheels within wheels turning in the sky.  The man who made this image endure wrote it from the bottom of his own wheel. His words outlasted every king who put him there. —— The Wheel of Fortune comes today to say: Nothing stays. That’s not a warning. It’s the point. What chapter are you in the middle of right now? #tarot #witchtok #arttok #tarothistory #darkacademia
This card is older than tarot by a thousand years. The Rota Fortunae, or Wheel of Fortune, is a symbol of the capricious nature of Fate belonging to the goddess Fortuna. She spins it at random, changing the positions of those on the wheel: some suffer great misfortune, others gain windfalls. Fortuna’s name may derive from Vortumna: “she who revolves the year.” The metaphor was already considered a cliché in ancient times. Tacitus complained about it. The image was given its defining form by Boethius in The Consolation of Philosophy, written around 524 CE. What most retellings leave out: Boethius was a Roman senator condemned to death by the Ostrogothic King Theodoric on charges of treason. He wrote his account of Fortune’s wheel from a prison cell. He was executed shortly after completing it. His book became one of the most widely read texts of the Middle Ages. King Alfred the Great translated it into Anglo-Saxon. Shakespeare drew on it in both Hamlet and King Lear. Chaucer referenced it in The Canterbury Tales. Thomas More is said to have read it before his own execution. In Waite’s 1909 design, the letters T-A-R-O appear on the wheel clockwise. Read counterclockwise, the same letters spell R-O-T-A: the Latin word for “wheel.” Waite drew the design partly from the vision of Ezekiel: wheels within wheels turning in the sky. The man who made this image endure wrote it from the bottom of his own wheel. His words outlasted every king who put him there. —— The Wheel of Fortune comes today to say: Nothing stays. That’s not a warning. It’s the point. What chapter are you in the middle of right now? #tarot #witchtok #arttok #tarothistory #darkacademia

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