• Sign up or login, and you'll have full access to opportunities of forum.

The Coffee Shop

  • Thread starter The Fallen Angel
  • Start date
Go to CruxDreams.com
Hi Hans. To the best of my knowledge there is no Bilbao in Japan. If you ever go to Bilbao don't waste your money on the Guggenheim. Instead visit the Fine Arts Museum on a Wednesday (It's free then :) ) i'm a dutch you know :))
2 vliegen in 1 klap ? We would say "Kill two birds with one stone." poor birdss :((
Julie
 
Thanks Mel, for posting the vid of the naked, sweating gal pushing the mill thingy round and round. That was very hot!

I liked the gal wearing the diaper doing the whipping! This company puts together some pretty nice stuff.

They just need to put a little more 'umph' into it, if you know what I mean.

Still, hot stuff! TY GR
 

Attachments

  • ScreenShot111.jpg
    ScreenShot111.jpg
    299.1 KB · Views: 512
  • ScreenShot113.jpg
    ScreenShot113.jpg
    314.5 KB · Views: 514
  • ScreenShot116.jpg
    ScreenShot116.jpg
    315.9 KB · Views: 500
jonesygirl said:
This site now has more excellent writers than you can shake a stick at and it's a pleasure to link their fantasies with pics and video

You can shake a stick at me any night, Julie!

Little did my fear-thrilled mind anticipate,
as I slipped off my summer undies
in the Coffee Shop,
what cruel adventures were in store for me!

Now those who like my word-pics -
not just the friends I've come to know and dread,
but all those silent men who darkly prowl
this site as the planet turns
(I know you're there!)
can put a terrified face and tortured body
to the little wordsmith -

Zoom in boys,
relish each strand of tangled chestnut hair,
those anxious-glancing eyes,
quivering lips,
sweat-beaded breasts
that bounce to to the lick of the lash,
whip-ready rump,
long striving thighs,
and cruelly defenceless cunt...

enjoy Eulalia!
 
Ms. E,

I'd try to compose some pithy prose to reply but I'm at The High Immoral Authority getting some warrants issued.

See your sweatty flesh soon...

THT
 
jonesygirl said:
Hi Hans. To the best of my knowledge there is no Bilbao in Japan. If you ever go to Bilbao don't waste your money on the Guggenheim. Instead visit the Fine Arts Museum on a Wednesday (It's free then :) )
2 vliegen in 1 klap ? We would say "Kill two birds with one stone."
Julie
Until now, I didn't know there was a Guggenheim in Spain, learn something new everytime I come here. I've been to the one in New York. It's pretty good if you like abstract.
Speaking of Spain (well, Spaniards) & museums, if you ever get to my part of the world, check out the new Dali Museum in St Petersburg. It's awesome.
 
Hi,
For anyone following Eulalia's poetry and in need of a dictionary here are some definitions:

lorica=- a hard protective sheath

arabica= A species of coffee, Coffea arabica, originating in Ethiopia and widely cultivated for its high-quality, commercially valuable seeds.

Machiato= Usually prepared as a serving of espresso marked with frothed milk

tiramisu= (Cookery) an Italian dessert made with sponge soaked in coffee and Marsala, topped with soft cheese and powdered chocolate

I hope that clears things up! And we thought we could be obtuse!!!!

Hi Naraku!,
As you say you learn something new on this site every visit! The last time we visited the Guggenheim in Bilbao it was expensive and all about the architect, his history, the construction, materials, previous constructions and so on. You could get a meal in the restaurant for about $200 if you were daft enough. It is not a real museum, more a rip off.
Having said that, Bilbao is well worth a visit.

Melissa
 
That's right Melissa, though a legionary's lorica was actually his breastplate, leather or steel -

As he enters The Coffee Shop, Ulrika relieves him of his lorica
while Bella offers him a steaming cup of macchiato
brewed from the finest slave-ground arabica

Planet-friendly and Fair Trade of course - no carbon emissions from our Coffee Mill,
and we make sure our slaves get lashings over the market rate!


Then she tempts him with sinful tiramisu

(Italian = 'pick-me-up', as Bella might well say!)

melissa said:
You have such a magnificent body it is a shame you haven't yet let Connie have the pleasure of it. You need to spend the night on the cross and then be whipped again in high definition. You will succumb to Connie's charms.

Thanks for the HD video and stills of the Coffee Grinding sequence - delicious!
May I humbly beg a still or two from tother one, where I'm hanging on the Cross, woken from my tortured daze by Connie's cruel lash?


She's awesome!
Cold contemptuous eyes,
savage sadistic glee as she thrashes me!

I'm tingling, ooze with orgasmic expectation...

If Connie's lusting after my poor tortured flesh,
she's conquered me!
 
Hi,
These are from the right clip and I think they are in order. :)

Melissa
 

Attachments

  • ScreenShot070.jpg
    ScreenShot070.jpg
    270.3 KB · Views: 342
  • ScreenShot069.jpg
    ScreenShot069.jpg
    323.5 KB · Views: 339
  • ScreenShot068.jpg
    ScreenShot068.jpg
    323.4 KB · Views: 342
  • ScreenShot067.jpg
    ScreenShot067.jpg
    335.7 KB · Views: 337
  • ScreenShot066.jpg
    ScreenShot066.jpg
    287.4 KB · Views: 328
  • ScreenShot065.jpg
    ScreenShot065.jpg
    321.2 KB · Views: 335
  • ScreenShot064.jpg
    ScreenShot064.jpg
    281.8 KB · Views: 329
Wonderful! :ymhug:
 
Eulalia said:
That's right Melissa, though a legionary's lorica was actually his breastplate, leather or steel -

As he enters The Coffee Shop, Ulrika relieves him of his lorica
while Bella offers him a steaming cup of macchiato
brewed from the finest slave-ground arabica

Planet-friendly and Fair Trade of course - no carbon emissions from our Coffee Mill,
and we make sure our slaves get lashings over the market rate!


Then she tempts him with sinful tiramisu

(Italian = 'pick-me-up', as Bella might well say!)

melissa said:
You have such a magnificent body it is a shame you haven't yet let Connie have the pleasure of it. You need to spend the night on the cross and then be whipped again in high definition. You will succumb to Connie's charms.

Thanks for the HD video and stills of the Coffee Grinding sequence - delicious!
May I humbly beg a still or two from tother one, where I'm hanging on the Cross, woken from my tortured daze by Connie's cruel lash?


She's awesome!
Cold contemptuous eyes,
savage sadistic glee as she thrashes me!

I'm tingling, ooze with orgasmic expectation...

If Connie's lusting after my poor tortured flesh,
she's conquered me!
Down on your knees in front of me...you will give me pleasure like a good slave,if you fail to pleasure me you will feel the sting of my lash!
 
Hi Eulalia,
I'm puzzled as to why you upload a pic as part of a doc? You can simply upload the pic from your computer.
Apparently Pernette de Guillet only survived to the age of 25. I can barely read modern French so I would have no clue with 16thC French! Out of interest which of her many verses were you referring to?
I think Connie is warming up to give you the whipping you deserve! :ymdevil:

Melissa
 

Attachments

  • pernette-de-guillet-01.jpg
    pernette-de-guillet-01.jpg
    58 KB · Views: 433
  • Slave.jpg
    Slave.jpg
    123.5 KB · Views: 442
We didn't get a National Holiday!!! :( We had to go to work =(( We are moving to Russia!! :)

We thought Eulalia may be a Gillbert and Sullivan fan so here is Apostate's idea of how G & S may have treated the subject of Xena and Gabrielle. It's been posted before but no harm in posting again. Anything for a laugh :)


Only half on topic, and only Gilbert and Sullivan fans are likely to get it, but I could not resist.

The footnotes really do help.

[We join our operetta already in progress. The infamous Pirates of Pergamum have just seized a bevy of beautiful Mytilenean maidens, and are attempting to carry them off for matrimonial purposes. Gabrielle intervenes, with a recitative (well, it's better than a pan flute solo):]

Gabrielle :
Hold, scoundrels! Ere ye practice acts of villainy
Upon the peaceful and agrarian,
Just bear in mind, these maidens of My-TIL-ene*
Are guarded by a buff barbarian!

Pirates :
We'd better all rethink our cunning plan;
They're guarded by a buff barbarian.
Maidens :
Yes, yes, she is a buff barbarian.

[Xena leaps in from the wings, with a tremendous war cry, does a mid-air somersault, and lands on her feet on the Pirate King's chest.]

Xena :
Yes, yes, I am a buff barbarian! [The orchestra starts up.]
I am the very model of a heroine barbarian;
Through Herculean efforts, I've become humanitarian.
I ride throughout the hinterland -- at least that's what they call it in
Those sissy towns like Athens (I, myself, am Amphipolitan).
I travel with a poet who is perky and parthenian*
And scribbles her hexameters in Linear Mycenian*
(And many have attempted, by a host of methods mystical,
To tell if our relationship's sororal or sapphistical).

Chorus :
To tell if their relationship's sororal or sapphistical!
To tell if their relationship's sororal or sapphistical!
To tell if their relationship's sororal or sapphisti-phistical!

Xena :
My armory is brazen, but my weapons are ironical;
My sword is rather phallic, but my chakram's rather yonical*
(To find out what that means, you'll have to study Indo-Aryan*).
I am the very model of a heroine barbarian!

Chorus :
To find out what that means, we'll have to study Indo-Aryan--
She is the very model of a heroine barbarian!

Xena :
I wake up every morning, ere the dawn is rhododactylous*
(Who needs to wait for daylight? I just work by sensus tactilis*.)
And ride into the sunrise to protect some local villagers
From mythologic monsters or from all-too-human pillagers.
I hurtle towards each villain with a recklessness ebullient
And cow him with my swordwork and my alalaes ululient*;
He's frightened for his head, because he knows I'm gonna whack it--he's
Aware that his opponent is the Basileia Makhetes!

[The music crashes to a halt, as the Chorus stares at Xena in utter confusion. She sighs.] It's *Greek*. It means "Warrior Princess"! [Light dawns on the Chorus, and the music resumes.] Sheesh . . .

Chorus :
He knows that his opponent is the Basileia Makhetes!
He knows that his opponent is the Basileia Makhetes!
He knows that his opponent is the Basileia Makhe-makhetes,

Xena :
Because I've got my armor, which is really rather silly, on
(It's cut so low I feel like I'm the topless tow'rs of Ilion,
And isn't any use against attackers sagittarian*).
I am the very model of a heroine barbarian!

Chorus :
It isn't any use against attackers sagittarian --
She is the very model of a heroine barbarian!

Xena :
In short, when I can tell you how I break the laws of gravity,
And why my togs expose my intermammary concavity,
And why my comrade changed her dress from one that fit more comfily
To one that shows her omphalos* (as cute as that of Omphale*),
And why the tale of Spartacus appears in Homer's versicon*,
[She holds up a tomato:]
And where we found examples of the genus Lycopersicon*,
And why this Grecian scenery looks more like the Antipodes,
You'll say I'm twice the heroine of any in Euripides!

Chorus :
We'll say she's twice the heroine of any in Euripides!
We'll say she's twice the heroine of any in Euripides!
We'll say she's twice the heroine of any in Euripi-ripides!

Xena :
But though the kinked chronology, confusing and chimerical
(It's often unhistorical, but rarely unhysterical),
Would give a massive heart attack to any antiquarian,
I am the very model of a heroine barbarian!

Chorus :
'Twould give a massive heart attack to any antiquarian --
She is the very model of a heroine barbarian!

[As the orchestra plays the final chords, a wild Xenaesque melee ensues, and the curtain has to be brought down.]

Notes:
[1]
Actually, "Mytilene" would properly be accented on the third syllable; Gabrielle always did have trouble with rhymes. (Mytilene, incidentally, is a city on the isle of Lesbos -- the hometown of the poet Sappho, as a matter of fact. It is not clear what, if anything, Gilbert is trying to imply here.) (back)
[2]
parthenian : virginal. (back)
[3]
Linear Mycenian : Mycenian is the ancient dialect of Greek which was written in Linear B (a form of Greek writing that predates the adoption of the alphabet). The implication is that Gabrielle does her writing in Linear B; if Xena takes place around the time of the Trojan war, this is chronologically reasonable. (back)
[4]
yonical : "Yonic" is the female counterpart to "phallic". (back)
[5]
Indo-Aryan : The language group consisting of Sanskrit and its close relatives. Both "chakram" and "yonic" are of Sanskrit derivation. (back)
[6]
rhododactylous : rosy-fingered. (Homer makes frequent reference to rhododaktulos eos -- "rosy-fingered dawn".) (back)
[7]
sensus tactilis : Latin for "the sense of touch". (back)
[8]
"Alalaes" are war-cries (the Greeks spelled a Xena-like war cry as alala or alale) and "ululient" is a coined term, apparently meaning "characterized by ululation". (back)
[9]
sagittarian : archer-like. (back)
[10]
omphalos : belly-button. (back)
[11]
Omphale : Legendary queen of Lydia. From context, we must assume that she had a cute belly-button; however, no known classical source seems to address this vital issue. (back)
[12]
versicon : a coined term, apparently meaning "collection of verse". (back)
[13]
Lycopersicon : the biological genus to which tomatoes are >assigned. (The tomato is a New World plant, and was entirely unknown in the Old World in pre-Columbian times. Thus, having tomatoes in a Xenaish context is an even greater anachronism than having Homer tell the tale of Spartacus.) (back) (Apostate)

Melissa
 
[center:2jp39iq5]Absolutely marvellous! I nearly choked on my Shrovetide pancakes chortling over it!

I can only reply with what is really a response to Julia's challenge to me, on the 'Ladies how do you manage...?' thread, to 'choose my dragon'.
I discovered this quite by chance today...

5 - 15 metres long
Its body is bright leaf-green to dark bluish green, exuding slimy mucous. Down each side of the body is a row of numerous leg-like paddles that are used both for walking over rocks and for swimming. Its head has a pair of antennae on either side and a fifth one in the middle between a pair of small black eyes. An amazingly large proboscis shoots out to catch and devour its prey.

Its name is Eulalia viridis!!!

(all the above is true except it's really only 5-15 centimetres, being a Greenleaf Worm that you can find on rocks at the seaside -
why it's got my name I'd rather not speculate!)[/center:2jp39iq5]
 
Hi Eulalia,
I'm guessing you have no photo editing programmes or means of extracting pics from a word doc. In that case you can use Paint as follows.

1.Find the page in your Word Doc
2.Press the PrtSc key
3.Go to Start>All Progs>Accessories>Paint
4.Edit>Paste
5.Click on dotted rectangle in top left corner.
6. Click on top left of desired pic and drag cursor to bottom right of pic.
7.Click on Edit>Copy
8. Now File>New and Don't Save
9. With the new white canvas Edit>Paste
10. Now File>Save As

In the following pics I've just used a screenshot.
 

Attachments

  • Save as.jpg
    Save as.jpg
    373.5 KB · Views: 298
  • Now Edit then paste.jpg
    Now Edit then paste.jpg
    343.6 KB · Views: 295
  • 3. Click the dotted rectangle.jpg
    3. Click the dotted rectangle.jpg
    670 KB · Views: 288
  • 2. Using Paint.jpg
    2. Using Paint.jpg
    597.5 KB · Views: 293
  • 1. Press PrtSc.jpg
    1. Press PrtSc.jpg
    548.1 KB · Views: 300
Back
Top Bottom