@dumpsterdivingmama: HEY, SOMETHING IS SOMETHING RIGHT?! THESE ARE CUTE! #dumpsterdiving #dumpsterdiversoftexas #DUMPSTERDIVER #DUMPSTERDIVING

ᴅᴜᴍᴘꜱᴛᴇʀᴅɪᴠɪɴɢᴍᴀᴍᴀ
ᴅᴜᴍᴘꜱᴛᴇʀᴅɪᴠɪɴɢᴍᴀᴍᴀ
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Sunday 02 November 2025 03:39:29 GMT
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themailehighclub
Jordan :
Ulta doesn’t even try to recycle their boxes. Pmo.
2025-11-02 17:03:18
6
draulistory
Drauli :
Aaawww I found some bunny headbands too :) I wonder why they damage the same type of products for each Ulta
2025-11-03 07:24:17
0
nailah_1506
Nailakece :
menit semua komen nya jir
2025-11-02 04:07:26
4
blondiee20202026
The🇺🇸Mama :
I always get scared bc at the mall they have security driving around and around plus cameras everywhere, but there’s no locks on the trash cans when I go to jail if I go over there and look in the dumpsters
2025-11-02 04:39:17
1
urguardiangel18
🎀kendrah🎀 :
image how if she find a cat 🥹
2025-11-02 13:19:46
0
caca_4lone
sasaa | alone🎱 :
ga pernah semau ini jadi pemulung
2025-11-02 03:56:06
3
cutie.world00
dilhen 🎀 :
2
2025-11-02 04:17:49
0
charli_eve5
Cʜᴀʀʟɪ_ᴇᴠ :
14 минут назад
2025-11-02 03:54:31
0
mykahlida
Kaleda :
American 🙏
2025-11-02 05:41:32
0
myyy_ntii
memel suka biruu💙 :
gua disitu pasti yg paling gragas
2025-11-03 11:37:55
0
user5233347562499
pupsik_5124 :
name plz?
2025-11-02 17:11:19
4
meghanw619
meghanw619 :
I could never do it, you keep doing it. but the things that people do in those things
2025-11-02 07:50:17
0
userpyf17tbcjo
cô bé yêu Nước ❤️🇻🇳🫰 :
he lo
2025-11-02 03:45:06
0
rnayra_d
𐙚˚𝓝𝖺𝗒⚊𝓡𝖺 :
1?
2025-11-02 03:56:53
0
brickplayzroblox
★†BrickPlayzRoblox†★ :
early😭
2025-11-02 04:37:33
0
brigitte.gomez27
Brigitte Gomez :
hello
2025-11-02 03:44:15
0
kayla08963
Van Madrid ni bossss🥶🤙🏻🤙🏻 :
ke dua
2025-11-02 03:42:55
0
user067864916
كيلوا 😏 :
10
2025-11-02 03:51:32
1
voyeu2083
t.yn :
ê bả có đem về giặc bán ko vậy
2025-11-03 12:49:50
0
mita.yakul
maitos 😶‍🌫️💋❤ :
halo
2025-11-02 03:41:42
0
saa25150
🫀 :
9
2025-11-02 03:46:59
1
zuhra5821
Siti Fatimah zuhra :
13
2025-11-02 03:56:38
0
habibfajri167
HABIBx😮‍💨💤 :
p
2025-11-02 03:44:53
0
chrz.xy1
Nanattt :
🙂
2025-11-02 07:11:36
1
family_love.lh
Huỳnh Lâm :
😳
2025-11-06 10:21:26
0
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Paul Laurence Dunbar’s “When Dey Listed Colored Soldiers” From the 1901 book Candle-Lightin’ Time by poet Paul Laurence Dunbar Paul Laurence Dunbar was an African-American poet who gained national prominence in the late 19th/early 20th centuries. Born in 1872, he was raised in Dayton, Ohio, where he was the lone black student in his high school. His father was an escaped slave from Kentucky who served in the 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment and the 5th Massachusetts Colored Cavalry Regiment during the Civil War. In 1901, Dunbar published Candle-Lightin’ Time. The book was an artistic calloboration, featuring poems by Dunbar, photographs by Leigh Richmond Miner of the Hampton Institute Camera Club, and illustrated decorations by Margaret Armstrong. The work includes an ode to African American Civil War soldiers titled When Dey Listed Colored Soldiers, which is presented further below along with photographs from the book. The poem was no doubt inspired by his father. The poem is interesting in that, while centering on the suffering and loss of a black mother for her son, it also speaks to the suffering of a white Confederate family. The poem’s narrator is the mother of a black Union soldier, but also, has a slave master who served in the Confederacy, along with the master’s son. Both master and son would feel the pain and anguish of war. In this, the slave mother and her mistress would share a bond that transcended race, section, and politics. Candle-Lightin’ Time features other, non-Civil War content and makes for a fine read not only for its poetry but for its photographs. Dunbar died in Dayton, Ohio at the age of 33 from tuberculosis. “When Dey Listed Colored Soldiers “ Dey was talkin’ in de cabin, dey was talkin’ in de hall; But I listened kin’ o’ keerless, not a-t’inkin’ ’bout it all; An’ on Sunday, too, I noticed, dey was whisp’rin’ mighty much, Stan’in’ all erroun’ de roadside w’en dey let us out o’ chu’ch. But I did n’t t’ink erbout it ‘twell de middle of de week, An’ my ‘Lias come to see me, an’ somehow he couldn’t speak. Den I seed all in a minute whut he’d come to see me for; – Dey had ‘listed colo’ed sojers, an’ my ‘Lias gwine to wah. Oh, I hugged him, an’ I kissed him, an’ I baiged him not to go; But he tol’ me dat his conscience, hit was callin’ to him so, An’ he could n’t baih to lingah w’en he had a chanst to fight For de freedom dey had gin him an’ de glory of de right. So he kissed me, an’ he lef’ me, w’en I’d p’omised to be true; An’ dey put a knapsack on him, an’ a coat all colo’ed blue. So I gin him pap’s ol’ Bible, f’om de bottom of de draw’, – W’en dey ‘listed colo’ed sojers an’ my ‘Lias went to wah. But I t’ought of all de weary miles dat he would have to tramp, An’ I could n’t be contented w’en dey tuk him to de camp. W’y, my hea’t nigh broke wid grievin’ twell I seed him on de street; Den I felt lak I could go an’ th’ow my body at his feet. For his buttons was a-shinin’, an’ his face was shinin’, too, An’ he looked so strong an’ mighty in his coat o’ sojer blue, Dat I hollahed, “Step up, manny,” dough my th’oat was so’ an’ raw,- W’en dey ‘listed colo’ed sojers an’ my ‘Lias went to wah. Ol’ Mis’ cried w’en mastah lef’ huh, young Miss mou’ned huh brothah Ned, An’ I did n’t know dey feelin’s is de ve’y wo’ds dey said W’en I tol’ ’em I was so’y. Dey had done gin up dey all; But dey only seem mo’ proudah dat dey men had hyeahd de call. Bofe my mastahs went in gray suits, an’ I loved de Yankee blue, But I t’ought dat I could sorrer for de losin’ of ’em too; But I could n’t, for I did n’t know de ha’f o’ whut I saw, ‘Twell dey ‘listed colo’ed sojers an’ my ‘Lias went to wah. Mastah Jack come home all sickly; he was broke for life, dey said; An’ dey lef’ my po’ young mastah some’r’s on de roadside, – dead. W’en de women cried an’ mou’ned ’em, I could feel it thoo an’ thoo, For I had a loved un fightin’ in de way o’ dangah, too. Den dey tol’ me dey had laid him some’r’s way down souf to res’, #blackhistory #fyp #fyppp #BlackTikTok #fypシ゚viral
Paul Laurence Dunbar’s “When Dey Listed Colored Soldiers” From the 1901 book Candle-Lightin’ Time by poet Paul Laurence Dunbar Paul Laurence Dunbar was an African-American poet who gained national prominence in the late 19th/early 20th centuries. Born in 1872, he was raised in Dayton, Ohio, where he was the lone black student in his high school. His father was an escaped slave from Kentucky who served in the 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment and the 5th Massachusetts Colored Cavalry Regiment during the Civil War. In 1901, Dunbar published Candle-Lightin’ Time. The book was an artistic calloboration, featuring poems by Dunbar, photographs by Leigh Richmond Miner of the Hampton Institute Camera Club, and illustrated decorations by Margaret Armstrong. The work includes an ode to African American Civil War soldiers titled When Dey Listed Colored Soldiers, which is presented further below along with photographs from the book. The poem was no doubt inspired by his father. The poem is interesting in that, while centering on the suffering and loss of a black mother for her son, it also speaks to the suffering of a white Confederate family. The poem’s narrator is the mother of a black Union soldier, but also, has a slave master who served in the Confederacy, along with the master’s son. Both master and son would feel the pain and anguish of war. In this, the slave mother and her mistress would share a bond that transcended race, section, and politics. Candle-Lightin’ Time features other, non-Civil War content and makes for a fine read not only for its poetry but for its photographs. Dunbar died in Dayton, Ohio at the age of 33 from tuberculosis. “When Dey Listed Colored Soldiers “ Dey was talkin’ in de cabin, dey was talkin’ in de hall; But I listened kin’ o’ keerless, not a-t’inkin’ ’bout it all; An’ on Sunday, too, I noticed, dey was whisp’rin’ mighty much, Stan’in’ all erroun’ de roadside w’en dey let us out o’ chu’ch. But I did n’t t’ink erbout it ‘twell de middle of de week, An’ my ‘Lias come to see me, an’ somehow he couldn’t speak. Den I seed all in a minute whut he’d come to see me for; – Dey had ‘listed colo’ed sojers, an’ my ‘Lias gwine to wah. Oh, I hugged him, an’ I kissed him, an’ I baiged him not to go; But he tol’ me dat his conscience, hit was callin’ to him so, An’ he could n’t baih to lingah w’en he had a chanst to fight For de freedom dey had gin him an’ de glory of de right. So he kissed me, an’ he lef’ me, w’en I’d p’omised to be true; An’ dey put a knapsack on him, an’ a coat all colo’ed blue. So I gin him pap’s ol’ Bible, f’om de bottom of de draw’, – W’en dey ‘listed colo’ed sojers an’ my ‘Lias went to wah. But I t’ought of all de weary miles dat he would have to tramp, An’ I could n’t be contented w’en dey tuk him to de camp. W’y, my hea’t nigh broke wid grievin’ twell I seed him on de street; Den I felt lak I could go an’ th’ow my body at his feet. For his buttons was a-shinin’, an’ his face was shinin’, too, An’ he looked so strong an’ mighty in his coat o’ sojer blue, Dat I hollahed, “Step up, manny,” dough my th’oat was so’ an’ raw,- W’en dey ‘listed colo’ed sojers an’ my ‘Lias went to wah. Ol’ Mis’ cried w’en mastah lef’ huh, young Miss mou’ned huh brothah Ned, An’ I did n’t know dey feelin’s is de ve’y wo’ds dey said W’en I tol’ ’em I was so’y. Dey had done gin up dey all; But dey only seem mo’ proudah dat dey men had hyeahd de call. Bofe my mastahs went in gray suits, an’ I loved de Yankee blue, But I t’ought dat I could sorrer for de losin’ of ’em too; But I could n’t, for I did n’t know de ha’f o’ whut I saw, ‘Twell dey ‘listed colo’ed sojers an’ my ‘Lias went to wah. Mastah Jack come home all sickly; he was broke for life, dey said; An’ dey lef’ my po’ young mastah some’r’s on de roadside, – dead. W’en de women cried an’ mou’ned ’em, I could feel it thoo an’ thoo, For I had a loved un fightin’ in de way o’ dangah, too. Den dey tol’ me dey had laid him some’r’s way down souf to res’, #blackhistory #fyp #fyppp #BlackTikTok #fypシ゚viral

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