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"dance "

Book 13. (1 results) Explorers of Gor (Individual Quote)

To be sure, only a slave dance could begin from such a posture. - (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 33, Sentence #120)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
33 120 To be sure, only a slave dance could begin from such a posture.

Book 13. (7 results) Explorers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
33 117 It is, for example, quite familiar in Port Kar and, far to the southeast of that port, and somewhere far to the north and east of our present position, in the Tahari.
33 118 Slave dances, of course, may begin in dozens of ways, sometimes even with the girl roped or chained at a man's feet.
33 119 I looked at Tende.
33 120 To be sure, only a slave dance could begin from such a posture.
33 121 No free woman, for example, would dare to place herself in such a position before Gorean free men, unless perhaps, weary of her misery and frustration, she was begging them, almost explicitly, to put her in a collar.
33 122 There are many stories of Gorean free women, sometimes of high caste, who, as a lark or in a spirit of bold play, dared to dance in a paga tavern.
33 123 Often, perhaps to their horror, they found themselves that very night hooded and gagged, locked in close chains, lying on their back, their legs drawn up, fastened in a wagon, chained by the neck and ankles, their small bodies bruised on its rough boards as they, helpless beneath a rough tarn blanket, are carried through the gates of their city.
It is, for example, quite familiar in Port Kar and, far to the southeast of that port, and somewhere far to the north and east of our present position, in the Tahari. Slave dances, of course, may begin in dozens of ways, sometimes even with the girl roped or chained at a man's feet. I looked at Tende. To be sure, only a slave dance could begin from such a posture. No free woman, for example, would dare to place herself in such a position before Gorean free men, unless perhaps, weary of her misery and frustration, she was begging them, almost explicitly, to put her in a collar. There are many stories of Gorean free women, sometimes of high caste, who, as a lark or in a spirit of bold play, dared to dance in a paga tavern. Often, perhaps to their horror, they found themselves that very night hooded and gagged, locked in close chains, lying on their back, their legs drawn up, fastened in a wagon, chained by the neck and ankles, their small bodies bruised on its rough boards as they, helpless beneath a rough tarn blanket, are carried through the gates of their city. - (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 33)