Book 15. (1 results) Rogue of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
153
I then put her through a variety of positions, more experimenting with the possibilities of the apparatus than anything else, though the experiments had their aesthetic value, for the Lady Tima was a lovely woman.
I then put her through a variety of positions, more experimenting with the possibilities of the apparatus than anything else, though the experiments had their aesthetic value, for the Lady Tima was a lovely woman.
- (Rogue of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #153)
Book 15. (7 results) Rogue of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
150
"You look well on your knees before me," I said.
2
151
"Jason," she wept.
2
152
I then bent her backward, and then, lifting and turning her, examined the left side of her beauty, and then the right.
2
153
I then put her through a variety of positions, more experimenting with the possibilities of the apparatus than anything else, though the experiments had their aesthetic value, for the Lady Tima was a lovely woman.
2
154
"Fascinating," I said.
2
155
"Jason," she protested.
2
156
I then, as I had grown more proficient with the device, used it for one of its two major purposes, that of exhibiting and displaying its helpless prisoner.
"You look well on your knees before me," I said.
"Jason," she wept.
I then bent her backward, and then, lifting and turning her, examined the left side of her beauty, and then the right.
I then put her through a variety of positions, more experimenting with the possibilities of the apparatus than anything else, though the experiments had their aesthetic value, for the Lady Tima was a lovely woman.
"Fascinating," I said.
"Jason," she protested.
I then, as I had grown more proficient with the device, used it for one of its two major purposes, that of exhibiting and displaying its helpless prisoner.
- (Rogue of Gor, Chapter 2)