Description: Trypanohyncha Ocellus consisted of a smooth rounded body that featured a number of ocular irises attached to a system of tentacles that the creature can extend or retract. The tentacles were extremely strong, and served to climb into the ocular cavity of another living organism and dislodge the eyes. After Trypanohyncha Ocellus settled into the socket and replaced the eye, the creature took over the ocular pathways to the organism's brain. This overrode host body's neurotransmissions to the rest of its body. Once in the eye socket, the many body of the creature could change and resemble the eye of the host creature. The multiple irises appeared to combine to create a single iris.
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Description: Bigwig (named Thlayli in Lapine) is a central character in Richard Adams' novel Watership Down. He is a large, brave, and strong rabbit, formerly a member of the Sandleford Owsla (military elite).
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Description: El-ahrairah is the legendary trickster hero and folk deity of rabbits in Richard Adams' novel Watership Down, known as the "Prince with a Thousand Enemies" (El-ahrairah in Lapine). He embodies rabbit cunning, bravery, and resilience, constantly outsmarting predators like the Black Rabbit of Inlé and rulers like the Owsla, serving as a symbol of hope and inspiration for the main characters as they face their own struggles.
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Description: Edgar Allan Poe wrote "Believe nothing you hear, and only one half that you see" in his 1845 short story, "The System of Dr. Tarr and Prof. Fether". While often attributed to others, this phrase is a well-known, direct quotation from his work, reflecting themes of illusion and skepticism.
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Description: For the uninitiated (and the poorly dressed): Jólakötturinn, the Yule Cat, is an Icelandic Christmas monster who prowls the winter night sniffing out anyone who didn’t receive new clothes for Christmas. If your wardrobe update is lacking? He eats you. Not “symbolically.” Not “metaphorically.” He just… eats you. It’s basically the world’s oldest “wear something nice or else” policy. Fashion by fear.
Description: Krampus is the legendary Alpine holiday problem-solver. Saint Nick handles the gifts — Krampus handles the “Nope, you absolutely were NOT good this year” situations. He shows up with chains, sticks, hooves, and a general vibe of “I will drag you into the woods, Timothy.” It’s basically the Christmas version of outsourcing discipline to a goat-demon with great cardio.
Description: Elmer the Safety Elephant is a renowned Canadian child safety mascot created in 1947 by Toronto Police Inspector Vernon Page and Telegram editor Bas Mason to teach children traffic safety rules. Designed to reduce accidents, the cartoon elephant was highly successful, reducing child traffic collisions by 44% in its first year.