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Book 16. (1 results) Guardsman of Gor (Individual Quote)

Two men, it seemed, she loved, he whom she had served in the holding of Policrates, he who had treated her with the insolence commonly accorded an Earth-girl slave by Gorean masters, and he whom she had served on the stones of the Street of the Writhing Slave, he who had treated her as a full and lowly slave, who once, perchance, had been an Earth girl. - (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 18, Sentence #164)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
18 164 Two men, it seemed, she loved, he whom she had served in the holding of Policrates, he who had treated her with the insolence commonly accorded an Earth-girl slave by Gorean masters, and he whom she had served on the stones of the Street of the Writhing slave, he who had treated her as a full and lowly slave, who once, perchance, had been an Earth girl.

Book 16. (7 results) Guardsman of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
18 161 By morning she had learned this lesson well.
18 162 We did not relate to one another in the perverted modality of unisexual identicals but in the order of nature, she as woman, and slave, I as man, and master.
18 163 When I, finished with her for the time, had sent her fleeing from me, she had been riven with conflict.
18 164 Two men, it seemed, she loved, he whom she had served in the holding of Policrates, he who had treated her with the insolence commonly accorded an Earth-girl slave by Gorean masters, and he whom she had served on the stones of the Street of the Writhing slave, he who had treated her as a full and lowly slave, who once, perchance, had been an Earth girl.
18 165 I reached to my left and, from the rack on the gong frame, picked up the slender stick which reposed there.
18 166 On this stick was mounted a rounded, fur-wrapped head.
18 167 I struck the gong once, smartly, replaced the stick, and leaned back in the curule chair.
By morning she had learned this lesson well. We did not relate to one another in the perverted modality of unisexual identicals but in the order of nature, she as woman, and slave, I as man, and master. When I, finished with her for the time, had sent her fleeing from me, she had been riven with conflict. Two men, it seemed, she loved, he whom she had served in the holding of Policrates, he who had treated her with the insolence commonly accorded an Earth-girl slave by Gorean masters, and he whom she had served on the stones of the Street of the Writhing slave, he who had treated her as a full and lowly slave, who once, perchance, had been an Earth girl. I reached to my left and, from the rack on the gong frame, picked up the slender stick which reposed there. On this stick was mounted a rounded, fur-wrapped head. I struck the gong once, smartly, replaced the stick, and leaned back in the curule chair. - (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 18)