The Barasingha or Swamp deer (Rucervus duvaucelii) is a deer species currently found in isolated localities in north and central India, and southwestern Nepal, and is extinct in Bangladesh..They are also found in small numbers in parts of Pakistan.[1]
The binomial commemorates the French naturalist Alfred Duvaucel.
The most striking feature of a barasingha is its antlers, with 10 to 14 tines on a mature stag, though some have been known to have up to 20. The name is derived from this characteristic and means 12 tined or horned in Hindi. In Assamese, barasingha is called dolhorina; dol meaning swamp. In Central India it is called goinjak (stags) or gaoni (hinds).
A stag may stand 132 cm (52 in) at the shoulder and weigh 170 to 180 kg (370 to 400 lb). Average antlers may measure 75 cm (30 in) round the curve with a girth of 13 cm (5.1 in) at mid beam. A record antler measured 104.1 cm (41.0 in) round the curve.
Barasinghas used to inhabit the basins of the Indus, Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers, as well as central India as far as the Godavari River. Bones aging over a thousand years have been found in the Langhanj site in Gujarat. Today, barasinghas have disappeared entirely from the western part of their range. In 1964, the total population in India was estimated at 3000 to 4000 individuals.[citation needed]
No, I sent you that letter
To ask you if the end was worth the means
Was there really no inbetween?
And I still don't feel better
I just wondered if it could be like before
And I think you just made me sure!
But then that's typically you
And I might have been a bit rude
But I wrote it in a bad mood
I'm not being funny with you
But it's hard to be engaging
When the things you love keep changing
Brassneck. Brassneck.
I just decided I don't trust you anymore
I just decided I don't trust you anymore
First time you came over
Do you remember you saying that you'd stay for good?
No I didn't think you would
Well we couldn't've been closer
But it was different then, and that's all in the past
There I've said it now at last!
You grew up quicker than me
I kept so many old things
And never quite stopped hoping
I think I know what this means
It means I've got to grow up
it means you want to throw up
Brassneck. Brassneck.
I just decided I don't trust you anymore
I just decided I don't love you anymore
I just know, you weren't listening, were you?
Oh please go, whenever you'd prefer to
I said it means a lot, when you use an old phrase
But then so what? We cant have it both ways
I know, you're not bothered, are you?
Even so, I'm not going to argue
He wont object! Keep writing to me
Just don't forget you ever knew me
Rolling off my side to start the day
Spoon in my hand to scrape my milk away
Forward pressing
For the reason I am dressing
And the answers for the times I stopped to pray
Searching for an ear to ease my mind
And eyes that see enough to lead the blind
Am I pretending?
These words we share in mending
Since when did listening become a crime?
Why, when I need some
It seems it never comes
It will be my self that I lose
If it’s still myself that I choose
Justifying time i’ve spent alone
To turn this empty house into a home
Now undressing
The reason I was pressing
Was to find another piece to help me grow
One more smile
One more day
I’ve silently grown wiser for this time
One more smile
One more day
One more time
You and me!
We will see
Hey Tony, don't go away, please.
You're Barins' souce, wow.
Someone's trying to stick me a finger now
But I'm not that type, no.
Valpolicella, you're glorious, I feel in a roses sea.
Tony, we're gonna miss you, bro.
O dear windy Brighton and Hove.
Take this day, go!
Well, I wanna know Mexico.
Do you think you're free when you do what you're supposed to?
Do you think you're free when you don't do what you're supposed to?
Do you think you're free when you do what you're not supposed to?
People feature in the stories they tell themselves, to make sense of their world; they're just a convenient but fictional character.
Shooting the breeze, oh cutting wind, breezing through different worlds. My guru's breeze.
Barins trying to catch the breeze.