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JD's bazaar
Re: JD's bazaar
Slave Rule #1- No matter how bad the pain is, it can always get worse
Re: JD's bazaar
Well, you did a hell of a good job with it imo. Just sayin.
Slave Rule #1- No matter how bad the pain is, it can always get worse
Re: JD's bazaar
And I mean it. Which means either I'm very easy to please, or you are really good at what you do. Trust me, it's the latter.
Slave Rule #1- No matter how bad the pain is, it can always get worse
Re: JD's bazaar
Those poor guys, being so short handed and overworked. I should offer my services to help out.
I love the discoloration around the joints. Nice attention to detail.
A lovely image, and thank you for sharing.
And yeah, I mean it... again.
Slave Rule #1- No matter how bad the pain is, it can always get worse
Re: JD's bazaar
10 rackings in only one morning! Those guys need to unionize themselves. After that, they will only rack one woman a day, in no more than 8 hours and if the weather outside is sunny with 6 coffee breaks of half an hour each.
I'll pretend to buy it.
Re: JD's bazaar
What I could find about this (at the prodding of that pesky LL, may the Prophet send lice on his beard) refers to a Dutch practice and illustration and the accompanying text were refering to a side-to-side. But I can vouch no more than a copper dinar on the truth of it.skullchaser wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 11:39 pm Something different! Nice! One thing tho - my understanding is that keel hauling was stem to stern, not gunnel to gunnel.
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Re: JD's bazaar
It's plausible. If the goal was punishment and not execution, it very well could have been gunnel to gunnel, which is a far shorter distance than bow to stern (and gunnel to gunnel is more likely to be survivable). Either way, I like the uniqueness of the illustration. Not something one comes across very often.doe.1971 wrote: ↑Sun Oct 10, 2021 12:18 amWhat I could find about this (at the prodding of that pesky LL, may the Prophet send lice on his beard) refers to a Dutch practice and illustration and the accompanying text were refering to a side-to-side. But I can vouch no more than a copper dinar on the truth of it.skullchaser wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 11:39 pm Something different! Nice! One thing tho - my understanding is that keel hauling was stem to stern, not gunnel to gunnel.
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