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Wip - Women In Peril

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He is taking her to someplace warm...as in he is going to bind her to a bed so that two other hot women can make love to her while he watches.

In her dreams!

Tribal peril, more tourists who didn't read the fine print?

abac28d0af2a0601e4289621e56cd712dedd3cd7.jpg 28e327171e7dd08b43f2054848042d2b6cdab646.jpg c7bc8e9668131441e108d8f46efed0cb5007d255.jpg
 
Antropologists during field work!:devil:

The #1 : the alternative was being eaten by the croc.:croc:
The #2 : the only way for a stranger to enter their territory!:D
The #3 : she had been warned not to wear these ugly white shoes when she went to see the tribal leader!:doh:

FC036D4B-6616-4E31-A57E-796BAB7B8DD6.jpeg It’s not nice to make fun of my shoes! :spank::spank::spank:
 
I am sailing
I am sailing
Home again
'Cross the sea
I am sailing,
Stormy waters
To be near you,
To be free

View attachment 547780
In the comic 'Asterix and the Picts', the picts have their condemned to death tied to a log and left afloat into the open sea, where they probably slowly die from starvation or, even more likely, from hypothermia or exposure to the elements. I don't know how historically correct that is, but it seems that this lady from the Northern Forest has clearly committed a serious crime. Or is she, considering her dark hair and the azure sea water, pushed into the Mediterranean?
 
In the comic 'Asterix and the Picts', the picts have their condemned to death tied to a log and left afloat into the open sea, where they probably slowly die from starvation or, even more likely, from hypothermia or exposure to the elements. I don't know how historically correct that is, but it seems that this lady from the Northern Forest has clearly committed a serious crime. Or is she, considering her dark hair and the azure sea water, pushed into the Mediterranean?
Or, more likely the log rolls over and they drown!
 
Or, more likely the log rolls over and they drown!
More likely drowning indeed. But tying a condemned to a raft and then to be left afloat into the open sea, is a much slower death than drowning. The cause could be hypothermia, or dehydration, depending on the climate, or starvation, meanwhile being exposed to weather and getting rocked up and down by the waves all the time.
 
In the comic 'Asterix and the Picts', the picts have their condemned to death tied to a log and left afloat into the open sea, where they probably slowly die from starvation or, even more likely, from hypothermia or exposure to the elements. I don't know how historically correct that is, but it seems that this lady from the Northern Forest has clearly committed a serious crime. Or is she, considering her dark hair and the azure sea water, pushed into the Mediterranean?
Well, that sort of thing was standard practice on the coasts around The Northern Forest.
A famous example was Teneu ('slender'), daughter of King Leudonus of Lothian, mother of St. Kentigern aka Mungo,
patron of Glasgow - she's Scotland's first recorded teenage mum, and certainly a woman in peril:
'When the king her father learned that she was pregnant ... he ordered her to be crushed with stones according to the law of his country, as a daughter who had acted wantonly and transgressed her father's law. For ... every woman born of noble parents, if she were caught in fornication, should be crushed with blows of stones, while a serving-maid was to be branded on the face with a mark of wickedness and held in scorn by all.
But because each of her executioners was unwilling to be guilty of shedding royal blood, she was taken to the brow of a mountain... so that she might be placed in a chariot and, hurled down from the summit ... consigned to a dreadful death ... But she commended herself to St Mary's protection and was unhurt. So she was taken to the Firth (of Forth) ... to the ... 'river-mouth of stench' (because so many fish got caught in nets there, the locals left them to rot and) the sand was cemented with the putrescent fluid, and the stench of violent rottenness used to send away very quickly any who came there... The girl was accompanied by many sympathising men and women to this place... the mother of the blessed child (who, though still unborn, was divinely directing his mother) was put into a coracle, that is, a boat made of hides, and towed out into the deep sea beyond the Isle of May... But when the pregnant girl left the estuary... all the fish of that margin of the sea accompanied her in procession, as their mistress... (so to this day there are no fish where she was set adrift, but huge catches out beyond the May) The mother of the blessed child was left alone in the middle of the sea. (She committed herself to God) And when morning broke, she came safely to land in Scotland (i.e. north of the Forth, in Fife - Lothian wasn't in the Kingdom of Scots until the 11th century). She was suffering greatly from the pangs of childbirth, and torturing pain. Commending herself to God, she found and re-kindled a half-extinguished fire and her her child was born. Herdsmen found her and told it to St Serf who (took mother and child under his care)'
 
Well, that sort of thing was standard practice on the coasts around The Northern Forest.
A famous example was Teneu ('slender'), daughter of King Leudonus of Lothian, mother of St. Kentigern aka Mungo,
patron of Glasgow - she's Scotland's first recorded teenage mum, and certainly a woman in peril:
'When the king her father learned that she was pregnant ... he ordered her to be crushed with stones according to the law of his country, as a daughter who had acted wantonly and transgressed her father's law. For ... every woman born of noble parents, if she were caught in fornication, should be crushed with blows of stones, while a serving-maid was to be branded on the face with a mark of wickedness and held in scorn by all.
But because each of her executioners was unwilling to be guilty of shedding royal blood, she was taken to the brow of a mountain... so that she might be placed in a chariot and, hurled down from the summit ... consigned to a dreadful death ... But she commended herself to St Mary's protection and was unhurt. So she was taken to the Firth (of Forth) ... to the ... 'river-mouth of stench' (because so many fish got caught in nets there, the locals left them to rot and) the sand was cemented with the putrescent fluid, and the stench of violent rottenness used to send away very quickly any who came there... The girl was accompanied by many sympathising men and women to this place... the mother of the blessed child (who, though still unborn, was divinely directing his mother) was put into a coracle, that is, a boat made of hides, and towed out into the deep sea beyond the Isle of May... But when the pregnant girl left the estuary... all the fish of that margin of the sea accompanied her in procession, as their mistress... (so to this day there are no fish where she was set adrift, but huge catches out beyond the May) The mother of the blessed child was left alone in the middle of the sea. (She committed herself to God) And when morning broke, she came safely to land in Scotland (i.e. north of the Forth, in Fife - Lothian wasn't in the Kingdom of Scots until the 11th century). She was suffering greatly from the pangs of childbirth, and torturing pain. Commending herself to God, she found and re-kindled a half-extinguished fire and her her child was born. Herdsmen found her and told it to St Serf who (took mother and child under his care)'

Crushed with stones? Yikes :eek::eek::eek:

Makes sense though ... there must have been plenty of stones lying about up there in the Northern Forest :rolleyes:
 
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