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Now these guys make music videos!
infinitiq 2 Reviews 3930 reads
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Should be banned for another hundred years.  BTW, what's your favorite bedside music or video?

-- Modified on 9/7/2004 9:30:08 PM

The 11 volume sexual memoir of a Victorian "Gentleman", originally published 1888-94, is now available on line.  Only 20 some sets were originally published.  Website nicely done.....you can click on explicit terms and are taken to the paragraphs of the work where they are used.
   Yes, you can read about the women with two vaginas.....hmmmm...triple play???
   Don't blame me if you spend hundreds of hours on this site.  If only high school history class had been this interesting.  History Channel, are you listening?

Poor thing had menses from BOTH, and had to pee with both.
Can you imagine having to stand in line in the women's room and having to pee? Try explaining why you need to be at the front of the line! They'll look at you like you have two heads! LOL

"Returning to England, H*l*n M. seemed much pleased to see me. After visiting her a few times, she agreed to accept what I could afford, and I became a regular friend tho I did not see her frequently. — What with presents, and years after assistance when she was in difficulties, the cost of her charms increased rather than diminished, but I was content and saw her when-ever the troubles of life made me miserable, and then her intense beauty, and most exquisite sexual inter-course relieved me."

"I raised myself on my elbow, my eyes to the opening. There were the thighs and legs stretching out to the floor, her bum was at the mere edge of the bed, her cunt but about six inches above my nose. I had a wonderfully keen scent for the aroma of a woman, and swear I smelt her cunt distinctly, though I could not see it. She sat there for full five minutes, talking to Jenny about the dress, whilst I kept sniffing up the aroma from her flesh and her love-orifice, and feeling my quivering prick, whilst my greedy eyes gloated on the fat thighs, so far as I could see them. "

"She was not a virgin, but I don't think a regular fuckstress, and I think had not had it for a long time; she enjoyed not embraces so strongly. After the first day she was much less ready, and more modest, no doubt the wine was in her on that first day, and that her system was craving for a fuck. Had it not been for that, I doubt if I should have got her, but who can tell. The cunt which has once had a prick up it will always have it again, and she helped to amuse me nicely for three weeks. "

Should be banned for another hundred years.  BTW, what's your favorite bedside music or video?

-- Modified on 9/7/2004 9:30:08 PM

Are the only "sexual scholars" here our two most famous "Ladies of the Boards"?  No indication from the men they are interested in reading?  
  Guys, we are becoming the minority.  There are now more women than men in college.  What better way to work on your reading skills than to get a "feeling" for history by examining this TITalating work!


Busy on the Kerry campaign.  And my reading time is loaded.

/Zin

I checked it out. I liked it, and will continue to peruse it bit by bit. I like a touch of the ol' erotica. I have a personal (secure!!) journal of my provider visits, and have often wondered if such reading would be interesting to anyone other than myself...


"Guys, we are becoming the minority.  There are now more women than men in college."


I know I almost went broke sending five of them to school.

This book is so voluminous, doing justice to its massive content can be a lifelong activity. I have had a copy of the old Grove edition since the 1960s, long before computers, and have browsed about it over the years. Never read it straight through, just jumped about in it. Victorian erotica is very entertaining- explicit, yet written in a high literary style. Other notable volumes are A Man and a Maid, The Romance of Lust, Frank and I, and The Pearl, to name just a few. A wave of them came out in Grove editions in the 60s after a lenient supreme court decision restricted banning them if they had "redeeming social value." That's why many of them have pseudo-scholarly prefaces which discuss their literary and societal value. I don't read these classics now as much as I used to, even though they still adorn my shelves. Spend most of my interest time now on TER. Incidentally, Fanny Hill- the Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, by John Cleland, an 18th century classic responsible for that supreme court decision, is also available online.

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