What do you think of these beautiful leather lace ups? My mo..
What do you think of these beautiful leather lace ups? My mother had them before me and gifted them to me as my first pair of boots as a domme.
2021-06-27 16:54:02 +0000 UTC View PostWhat do you think of these beautiful leather lace ups? My mother had them before me and gifted them to me as my first pair of boots as a domme.
2021-06-27 16:54:02 +0000 UTC View PostMatch my €200 donation and get a free month on onlyserena.com and a free 5 minute POV custom Help build a rescue shelter for strays in Spain gofund.me/e3a99d23
2021-06-27 08:40:40 +0000 UTC View PostHalf way there, my acolytes! https://onlyfans.com/161090419/gynarchygoddess
2021-06-27 08:28:04 +0000 UTC View PostThis should be a slaves reward: moisturising my legs
2021-06-25 19:30:27 +0000 UTC View Post♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Porcia Catonis The daughter of Marcus Porcius Cato Uticensus (Cato the Younger) and his first wife Atilia , Portia was born around 70 bce and had a brother who was named after their father. Cato the Younger belonged to the Roman Optimate (conservative) faction, and as such remained an ardent opponent of any perceived threat to the political status quo in general, and of Julius Caesar in particular, throughout his life. Portia zealously embraced the political ideals of her father and seems to have had no objection to her arranged marriage with Bibulus, another lifelong adversary of Caesar. (When Bibulus and Caesar were consular colleagues in 59 bce, Bibulus' attempt to scuttle Caesar's legislative program failed after Caesar essentially put his constitutional equal under house arrest.) Portia thus served to bind together the Optimates in sworn opposition to anything Caesarian. When the alliance of Caesar's one-time political ally Pompey the Great and Cato's faction maneuvered Caesar into open civil war (49 bce), both Portia's father and husband took up arms in defense of the languishing Republic. Unfortunately, neither was a particularly effective rival of Caesar's in the field: Bibulus died in 48 bce as a result of exhaustion brought on by an unsuccessful attempt to prevent Caesar from crossing to the Balkans so as to directly engage his rivals, while Cato, besieged by a Caesarian army in the north African town of Utica, committed suicide (46 bce) rather than be captured by his nemesis. (In fact, the memory of Cato was a much more effective obstacle to Caesar's reform package than the living Cato had ever been.) In 45 bce, Portia took as her second husband her cousin, Marcus Junius Brutus (they shared a common kinship in Livia [fl. 100 bce], from whose first husband Brutus was descended and from whose second husband Portia was descended). Portia seems to have had a decisive influence on her second husband (who divorced his prior wife Claudia in order to marry her), for although Brutus had initially been a partisan of Pompey's against Caesar in their civil war, after Pompey's defeat in 48 Caesar first pardoned Brutus, and then began to foster his political advancement. Brutus' reconversion to the Republican cause, after his marriage to Portia, pit Portia against Servilia II , Brutus' mother (but as Caesar's ex-mistress, also a pro-Caesarian). In the struggle for Brutus' political soul, Portia won. When in 44 bce Brutus joined the conspiracy to murder Caesar (on March 15), Portia insisted on being told of the assassination plot prior to the fact. Before doing so, she made a demonstration of her toughness to prove that she could be trusted never to divulge Brutus' most intimate secrets. She did this by taking a knife and making a deep cut in her thigh. Bearing the pain of the gash and the subsequent infection without a whimper, Portia thereby exhibited to Brutus her endurance in the face of suffering and won his complete confidence. After the assassination of Caesar, Portia was a vocal presence at the conference of Republicans which met at Antium (in June) as they attempted to stem their rapid decline in popularity among the masses. The conference also met to plan a defense against the growing military threat being organized by Caesar's still faithful followers (including especially the "Second Triumvirate," Marcus Antony, Lepidus and Octavian). When Brutus sailed east in order to organize the defense of his interests, Portia returned to Rome where, in increasing despair, she fell ill in the summer of 43 bce. Beset by the deteriorating position of Brutus and his allies and suffering physically, Portia decided to follow in the footsteps of her father by committing suicide. This she did either by inhaling the poisonous fumes wafting from a brazier, or (more dramatically) by swallowing live coals. Portia was affectionate by nature (at least with those who counted as her friends) and extremely proud of her family. With Bibulus, she had three sons, only one of whom (also named Bibulus) outlived her. This Bibulus joined his stepfather Brutus in the war against the Second Triumvirate, for which he was proscribed. After Brutus' defeat in the battle of Philippi, however, Antony offered the younger Bibulus a rapprochement, enabling him to recover his citizenship rights. Although Bibulus thereafter wrote a fond memoir of Brutus, he nevertheless abandoned the Republican cause so dear to Portia and her spouses by collaborating with the Triumvirs until his death about 32 bce.
2021-06-25 14:06:13 +0000 UTC View PostYour slave task for Friday 25th June #SlaveTask
2021-06-25 07:32:28 +0000 UTC View PostWifi is down in Spain! So unfortunately our live stream will have to wait until next month but I have saved your questions and happy to accept more until then
2021-06-24 19:52:11 +0000 UTC View PostGood morning! Heres a totally natural unedited picture. I will be online for a livestream with my mum this evening at around 8pm GMT for some q&a. I’d like to give my mum some $ for doing this, so if you would like to ask a question I’d suggest a $5 tip per question! Feel free to leave them below and I will make sure it gets answered.
2021-06-24 07:01:13 +0000 UTC View PostThe oiled body of a Goddess under the sun. Guess where the men were looking all day today in town?
2021-06-23 16:24:24 +0000 UTC View PostI want to do a mother & daughter dominatrix live stream Q&A either tonight or tomorrow. What works for you?
2021-06-23 15:55:18 +0000 UTC View PostWhoops… Goddess did some shopping. Who’s picking up the bill?
2021-06-23 15:51:17 +0000 UTC View PostYour slave task for Monday 21st June #SlaveTask
2021-06-21 07:32:41 +0000 UTC View PostThe boots are MINE 😍😍 thank you to everyone who donated but particularly @algol_sepia49 who is going to get the first fresh from the box video for his generosity. 2 custom pairs and it’s only June! I’m on a roll 😉 https://onlyfans.com/153390612/gynarchygoddess
2021-06-18 18:59:21 +0000 UTC View PostWhat do my fans think of s4s posts? Advertising other dommes for marketing?
2021-06-18 16:50:09 +0000 UTC View PostMadame De Sevigne Of old Burgundian nobility, she was orphaned at the age of six and was brought up by her uncle Philippe II de Coulanges. She had a happy childhood and was well educated by such famous tutors as Jean Chapelain and Gilles Ménage. She was introduced into court society and the précieux world of the Hôtel de Rambouillet in Paris after her marriage in 1644 to Henri de Sévigné, a Breton gentleman of old nobility who squandered most of her money before being killed in a duel in 1651. He left his widow with two children, Françoise Marguerite (b. 1646) and Charles (b. 1648). For some years Mme de Sévigné continued in the fashionable social circles of Paris while also devoting herself to her children. In 1669 her beautiful daughter, Françoise Marguerite, married the Count de Grignan and then moved with him to Provence, where he had been appointed lieutenant general of that province. The separation from her daughter provoked acute loneliness in Mme de Sévigné, and out of this grew her most important literary achievement, her letters to Mme de Grignan, which were written without literary intention or ambition. Most of the 1,700 letters that she wrote to her daughter were composed in the first seven years after their separation in 1671. The letters recount current news and events in fashionable society, describe prominent persons, comment on contemporary topics, and provide details of her life from day to day—her household, her acquaintances, her visits, and her taste in reading. The letters provide little that historians cannot find information about elsewhere, but Sévigné’s manner of telling her stories makes her version of current events and gossip unforgettable. Once her imagination had been caught by an incident, her sensibility and her powers as a literary artist were released in witty and absorbing narratives. Sévigné took no literary model for her artistry. Before her, critics had held that epistolary literature should conform to certain rules of composition and should observe a unity of tone (e.g., “serious” or “playful”). By contrast, Sévigné’s letters demonstrate a spontaneity and a natural disorder that have a highly interesting conversational tone. Thomas Davidson says: “Madame de Sévigné’s twenty-five years of letters to her daughter reveal the inner history of the time in wonderful detail, but the most interesting thing in the letters remains herself. In the midst of an age of gilded corruption, her name remains without a stain. Her heart was occupied by an intense devotion to her children, and a warmth of friendship almost beyond example. For no one ever had so many and such devoted friends – no woman ever knew like her how to transform a lover into a friend.”
2021-06-18 14:04:46 +0000 UTC View PostJust received a very special parcel
2021-06-15 18:26:01 +0000 UTC View PostJust broken into top 1.9% - I don’t expect to be there long but it’s another milestone! Thank you all
2021-06-14 18:45:00 +0000 UTC View Post