Bastinado Vk
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Bastinado Vk
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View all All Photos Tagged bastinado
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SmugMug + Flickr .
Connecting people through photography.
Empoisonnements esprits sculptés affections questions complicité signifie détournement des faits intentions entreprise complices meurtre échapper à un cerf,
casi bastinadoes hearken menti combinazioni infallibili inceptions crimini proposizioni di tribunali censurate che sfidano casi di nomina,
dönüştürülmüş yasalar aşırı titiz ihmal edilmiş cezalar fantastik delilik utanç verici sözler nefis hatırı sayılır kan,
fortunae se contemplationem verbis subornatis vitium praevalente notitia actus exterior mihi adversatur scientia verba rebus Mineruam,
domniemania politiques braki raporty niezamierzone narzucenia sprawy pragmatyczne wytrwałe reklamy zmienne cnoty mądrość zachowania,
δεσμευμένες χειρονομίες που επιτυγχάνουν ενοχλητικές εκφράσεις εμπόδια που παρέχουν ανεπαρκή γραπτά κρίνονται ιδέες προωθήσεις,
政治家の好古家は、理解の欠如の不作為の決定を識別する観察を目覚めさせますささやきは不完全さを経験しますカウンセラーは事前に設定された時間を尊重します.
meine Fußsohlen sollen ausgepeitscht werden. ich warte schon auf eine sehr nette Bastonade und hoffe es wird schön brennen :) aber auch nicht zu schlimm...oder nicht ;)
kidnapped tied up barefoot with soles feet heels nailed
Kidnapped in to the woods barefoot tied up to tree hands and legs tied hanged body. Victim body tied up, cruel kidnap.
Kidnapped barefoot victim feet torture in basement, bastinado.
Entitled Chinese punishment, whipping a lawbreaker [c1900] Attribution Unknown [RESTORED]. The photograph was cleaned of defects, and had contrast and tone adjusted.
"But first, ...thirty stokes with the big paddle!!!" is often heard on Chinese period dramas, ostensibly depicting how the Qing courts of yesteryear meted out punishment, or how judges "encourage" criminal confessions. Bastinado (also Bastinade, Bastinada - an alteration of the Spanish 'Baston' meaning 'stick') is a description of the whipping, flogging, paddling, or caning of a person's feet or legs; but can also include the buttocks; while the accused are held supine on the ground or face down across a punishment rack. Used for centuries around the world, this too, was one of the many corporal punishment techniques that the Qing routinely dealt out in order to maintain civil obedience.
The Bastinadoist (ie the one who delivers the repeated blows) is generally someone who is specially trained to inflict slow but grinding punishment, even up to the point of death after many hours of torturous paddling. The technique was readily described and amply pictured in various prints that detailed Chinese culture to Europeans.
With my chauffeur, Cutforth, taking a week off to visit his invalid sister in Wiveliscombe, and my butler, Beach, nowhere to be found, I thought I might as well take the Lanchester to the garage myself. It had developed a vulgarly dissonant magneto whine. It was an invigorating morning and I walked back to Bentos Towers, distributing farthings to peasant children along my route as my bodyguards, Waring and Gillow, beat back supplicant tenants ("give us bread") with staves believed to have been used as bastinado and brought back from Smyrna as souvenirs by my ancestor Oughtred Bentos, author of A Journey Through Armenia, Afghanistan and Conterminous parts of Asia Minor in the Year of our Lord 1810 and Chargé d'Affaires at Constantinople at a time when Bonaparte's ambitions threatened Britain's lines of communication with India.
I took this on the way back. My Agfa Isolette, when folded, slips unobtrusively into one of the capacious pockets of my Tweedside with Ghillie collar. I wonder why I encumber myself with the inconvenience and avoirdupois of twin-lens-reflex and 6X9cm medium format cameras when the results from this basic 120 folder seem hardly inferior. "Zone" focusing and, for practical purposes, two shutter speeds ...1/50th and 1/200th... yet I don't seem to make errors of exposure more calamitous than those I make with better cameras. The speeds don't even correspond to the usual progression given on "modern" light meters ...60, 125, 250, 500th. By the time I climbed the steps of the House it was breakfast time and I'd worked up an appetite. Beach had been doing the morning rounds of the henhouses, where I keep a much-admired flock of Orpingtons. As he pulled aside the great door, a paradisial aroma of eggs and kippers rose from the kitchens.
Title : "Evenings in my Tent; or, Wanderings in Balad Ejjareed. Illustrating the moral, religious, social, and political conditions of various Arab tribes of the African Sahara ... With numerous illustrations"
Author(s) : Davis, N. (Nathan), 1812-1882 [person]
British Library shelfmark : "Digital Store 10096.d.19"
Page : 241 (scanned page number - not necessarily the actual page number in the publication)
Place of publication : London (England)
Physical description : 2 volumes (8°)
Explore this item in the British Library’s catalogue:
000880075 (physical copy) and 014808774 (digitised copy)
(numbers are British Library identifiers)
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on the years [Blanch,Of Lewis the Dauphin and that lovely maid:If lusty love should go in quest of beauty,Where should he find it fairer than in Blanch ?If zealous love should go in search of virtue,Where should he find it purer than in Blanch ?If love ambitious sought a match of birth, 430 Whose veins bound richer blood than Lady Blanch ?Such as she is, in beauty, virtue, birth,Is the young Dauphin every way complete:If not complete of, say he is not she;And she again wants nothing, to name want,If want it be not that she is not he:He is the half part of a blessed man,Left to be finished by such as she;And she a fair divided excellence,Whose fulness of perfection lies in him. 440 O, two such silver currents, when they join,Do glorify the banks that bound them in;And two such shores to two such streams made one,Two such controlling bounds shall you be, kings,To these two princes, if you marry them.This union shall do more than battery canTo our fast-closed gates; for at this match, 31
Act ii. IKing 3obn, With swifter spleen than powder can enforce, The mouth of passage shall we fling wide ope, And give you entrance: but without this match, 450 The sea enraged is not half so deaf, Lions more confident, mountains and rocks More free from motion, no, not Death himself In mortal fury half so peremptory, As we to keep this city. Bast. Heres a stay That shakes the rotten carcass of old DeathOut of his rags! Heres a large mouth, indeed,That spits forth death and mountains, rocks andTalks as familiarly of roaring lions [seas, As maids of thirteen do of puppy-dogs! 460 What cannoneer begot this lusty blood ?He speaks plain cannon fire, and smoke and bounce;He gives the bastinado with his tongue:Our ears are cudgelld; not a word of hisBut buffets better than a fist of France:Zounds! I was never so bethumpd with wordsSince I first calld my brothers father dad. ML Son, list to this conj unction, make this match;Give with our niece a dowry large enough:For by this knot thou sha
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Title : "About Persia and its people. A description of their manners, customs, and home life. ... Illustrated"
Author(s) : Knanishu, Joseph [person]
British Library shelfmark : "Digital Store 10076.e.29"
Page : 183 (scanned page number - not necessarily the actual page number in the publication)
Place of publication : Rock Island, Illinois
Publisher : Lutheran Augustana Book Concern
Physical description : 300 pages (8°)
Explore this item in the British Library’s catalogue:
001987002 (physical copy) and 014815246 (digitised copy)
(numbers are British Library identifiers)
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Identifier : harpersnewmonthl00alde
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governor ordered him to be paraded throughthe streets on a jackass, and then bastinadoed.The Philadelphia cruised a while in the Mediter-ranean, exercising a wholesome restraint on thepirates, and the Essex, of the same squadron,guarded the straits between the Pillars of Her-cules. Another expedition was sent to the Mediter-ranean, under Commodore Morris, in 1802. Butvery little of great importance was done by thenavy in that quarter until 1804, when Tripoliwas bombarded. Commodore Preble had beensent thither to humble the pirates the previousyear. After bringing the belligerent Emperorof Morocco to terms, ho appeared before Tripoliwith his squadron. ThePhiladel/>hin, command-ed by Bainbridge, struck on a rock in the har-bor, and before she could be extricated, wascaptured by the Tripolitans. This occurred atthe close of October, 1803. The officers weretreated as prisoners of war, but the crew weremade slaves. She wras relieved, put in order, HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY. 1G5
EDWARD PKEBLE. and moored near the castle Lieutenant De-catur, son of Captain Decatur of the Delaware,resolved to wipe out the disgrace by capturing ordestroying the Philadelphia. With seventy-sixvolunteers he sailed into the harbor of Tripoli onthe evening of the 3d of February, 1804, ranalongside the Philadelphia under the guns of thecastle, boarded her, killed or drove into the seaall of her turbaned defenders, set her on fire,and under cover of a heavy cannonade from theAmerican squadron, escaped without losing aman. This bold act greatly alarmed the Ba-shaw, and he became exceedingly circumspect. At the close of July, 1804, Commodore Preble*appeared off Tripoli with his squadron, and atnearly three oclock in the afternoon of the 3dof August he attacked the town at grape-shot dis-tance. The fight with gun-boats was a desperateone; while the cannonade and bombardment,spiritedly answered by the Tripolitans, was un-ceasing. After a contest of nearly two hours,during which time the to
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Contributing Library : The Library of Congress
Digitizing Sponsor : The Library of Congress
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bout in the air, and sup-pose that when they are reading Jews, they must understandGentiles; and when they read Jerusalem, they must under-stand the church; and if it said earth, it means sky; and forthe coming of the Lord they must understand the progress ofthe missionary societies; and going up to the mountain ofthe Lords house, signifies a grand class-meeting of Methodists. During the twenty-four years from 1821 to 1845, Wolfftraveled extensively: in Africa, visiting Egypt and Abys-sinia; in Asia, traversing Palestine, Syria, Persia, Bokhara,and India. He also visited the United States, on the jour-ney thither preaching on the island of St. Helena. Hearrived in New York in August, 1837; and after speaking inthat city, he preached in Philadelphia and Baltimore, andfinally proceeded to Washington. Here, he says, on amotion brought forward by the ex-President, John QuincyAdams, in one of the houses of Congress, the House unani-mously granted me the use of the Congress Hall for a lect-
JOSEPH WOLFF AMONG THE ARABS. .1 GREA T RELIGIOUS AWAKENING. 361 tire, which I delivered on a Saturday, honored with the pres-ence of all the members of Congrejs, and also of the bishopof Virginia, and the clergy and citizens of Washington.The same honor was granted to me by the members of theGovernment of New Jersey and Pennsylvania, in whose pres-ence I delivered lectures on my researches in Asia, and alsoon the personal reign of Jesus Christ. Dr. Wolff traveled in the most barbarous countries, with-out the protection of any European authority, enduringmany hardships, and surrounded with countless perils. Hewas bastinadoed and starved, sold as a slave, and three timescondemned to death. He was beset by robbers, and some-times nearly perished from thirst. Once he was strippedof all that he possessed, and left to travel hundreds ofmiles on foot through the mountains, the snow beating inhis face, and his naked feet, benumbed by contact with thefrozen ground. When warned against going u
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Title : "The Story of Africa and its Explorers [With plates and maps.]"
Author(s) : Brown, Robert, M.A., Ph.D. [person]
British Library shelfmark : "Digital Store 10094.f.3"
Page : 414 (scanned page number - not necessarily the actual page number in the publication)
Place of publication : London (England)
Explore this item in the British Library’s catalogue:
000495563 (physical copy) and 015742679 (digitised copy)
(numbers are British Library identifiers)
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Identifier : worldsinhabitant00bett
Digitizing Sponsor : University of Toronto
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n is in a poor con- xurks. dition among the Turks, excepting as regards the Koran, and that chieflyamong the upper classes. The leading officials who governhave however a considerable amount of Western learning ; butthe Turk as a whole is not progressing either in agriculture or manu-factures. His sway appears bound to come to an end. Even inAdrianople the Turks are continually decreasing, while the Grreeks,Armenians, and Jews Are increasing. Perhaps many of the signs of Turkish transformation are equallycertain indications of approaching downfall. The Turk, ceasing to be awarrior or a fanatic, has no vaison detre. There is no bastinadoing, nohanging of thieves, not even of murderers ; and no baker convicted ofselling short weight has had his ear nailed to his own door-post for thelast fifteen years. The Sultan objects, like the kings of Holland andBelgium, to sign death warrants ; and the only punishment of murderersis to be sentenced to ten or fifteen years imprisonment, terms which
II 212 THE INHABITANTS OF EUROPE. they generally commute for themselves by escaping. {Times, Nov. 6,1886.) Turkish diplomacy has become a byword for procrastination andindecision, sure signs of weakness. The well-to-do Turks ambitionseems to be to transform himself into a Western gentleman. The ladiesaim at a corresponding change, and wear their yashmaks very thin,especially if they are pretty. Their mantles, made of striped red andwhite silk-gauze stuffs, are well fitted, and the Western corset is worn ;
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Civilization, in fact, grows more and more maudlin and hysterical; especially under democracy it tends to degenerate into a mere combat of crazes; the whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary.
All government, in its essence, is a conspiracy against the superior man: its one permanent object is to oppress him and cripple him. If it be aristocratic in organization, then it seeks to protect the man who is superior only in law against the man who is superior in fact; if it be democratic, then it seeks to protect the man who is inferior in every way against both. One of its primary functions is to regiment men by force, to make them as much alike as possible and as dependent upon one another as possible, to search out and combat originality among them. All it can see in an original idea is potential change, and hence an invasion of its prerogatives. The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out for himself, without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane and intolerable, and so, if he is romantic, he tries to change it. And even if he is not romantic personally he is very apt to spread discontent among those who are.
In the present case it is a little inaccurate to say I hate everything. I am strongly in favor of common sense, common honesty and common decency. This makes me forever ineligible to any public office of trust or profit in the Republic. B
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