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Salisbury, M: Goddess of Poison - Tödliche Berührung

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sbs: For those reading this and unaware, I am almost 8 weeks into a tease & denial protocol with a Domme you are very familiar with. I believe she may have something of my experiences with you. I’m sure you will make it agonizing for me and any others in my predicament. So beautiful yet so devilishly cruel you are! The Roman counterpart to Achlys seems to have been Caligo ('dark fog'). The first-century BC Roman mythographer Hyginus, in the Preface of his Fabulae, has Caligo being the mother of Chaos (for Hesiod the first being who existed), and, with Chaos, was the mother of Night ( Nox), Day ( Dies), Darkness ( Erebus) and Ether ( Aether), possibly drawing on an otherwise unknown Greek cosmological myth. [7] Dionysiaca [ edit ] his spirit failed him, and down over his eyes a mist [ἀχλύς] was shed. Howbeit he revived, and the breath of the North Wind as it blew upon him made him to live again after in grievous wise he had breathed forth his spirit. [3] sbs: Pump and surrender. Those two words would seem to be the perfect summation of what you do to us men. How does it feel to know how easily you’ve taken our stroking and made it our undoing? The more we stroke, the weaker we get for Poison. Sexually explicit material depicting bondage, S/M, and other fetish activities is allowed by the local law governing my jurisdiction.

Not every physician in Egypt was a Follower of Serket but a good many were. Serket, as goddess of healing and protector against poison and venomous stings, was naturally the patron of doctors, even those who were not directly involved in her cult. Spells invoking Serket for healing were widely used throughout Egypt. The scholar John F. Nunn notes this, writing:sbs: Your return has most assuredly reactivated the Poison for a number of submissives, this interviewer included! Just imagining what it might be like to visit that mansion, the Queen residing over the events as her expertly trained proteges absolutely ruin and destroy any man they wish to. Most, G.W., Hesiod: The Shield, Catalogue of Women, Other Fragments, Loeb Classical Library, No. 503, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 2007, 2018. ISBN 978-0-674-99721-9. Online version at Harvard University Press. As the protector against venom and snakebite, Serket often was said to protect the deities from Apep, the great snake-demon of evil, sometimes being depicted as the guard when Apep was captured.

Nonnus, Dionysiaca, Volume I: Books 1–15, translated by W. H. D. Rouse, Loeb Classical Library No. 344, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1940 (revised 1984). Online version at Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-99379-2. Internet Archive (1940). It has been suggested that Serket's identification with a scorpion may be a misinterpretation of the determinative of her name and animal associated with her and that could refer not to a scorpion, but rather to a water scorpion (Nepidae). According to this hypothesis, Serket is referred to as "she who gives breath" because of the way water scorpions seem to breathe underwater. The appearance of a waterscorpion must have made it be associated with the scorpion, therefore the use of the goddess for curing scorpion stings and other venomous creatures or maybe exactly because she "causes to breathe", not for the physical similarities of the creatures. [3] Gallery [ edit ] Orphic Argonautica in Orphica: Accedunt Procli Hymni, Hymni Magici, Hymnus in Isim alique eiusmodi carmina, edited by Eugenius Abel, Sumptibus Fecit G. Freytag, Leipzig, Prague, 1885. Wikimedia Commons. sbs: I recall seeing your offer when you tweeted it and am very excited to explore that story in a stand alone feature when you have completed their training. Can you give us a hint as to what you are sharing with these fellow Dommes, and where your mentoring may lead?

Her name, "She Who Causes the Throat to Breathe" comes directly from her association with the scorpion. Amulets were carried with her name on them to protect people from scorpion bites or to help them breathe if they were bitten. SeRket & the Osiris Myth Her name, "She Who Causes the Throat to Breathe" comes directly from her association with the scorpion.

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