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

But there is, of course, no one there, and, in the performance of the dance, that is clearly understood. - (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 20, Sentence #930)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
20 930 But there is, of course, no one there, and, in the performance of the dance, that is clearly understood.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
20 927 Swiftly she hurries about, in the graceful, frightened haste of the dancer, her hands seeming to trace the location of the obdurate barriers, those invisible walls which seemed to contain her.
20 928 She then stood and faced us, and put her head in her hands, bent over, and then straightened her body, her head and hair thrown back.
20 929 "I?" she seemed to ask, looking out, as though some rude jailer might have come to the gate of her pen.
20 930 But there is, of course, no one there, and, in the performance of the dance, that is clearly understood.
20 931 Then, in poignant fantasy, within the pen, she prepares herself for the master, seeming to thoughtfully select silks and jewelry, seeming to apply perfume and cosmetics, seeming to be bedecked in shimmering, diaphanous slave splendor.
20 932 She then crosses her wrists, and moves them, as though they have been bound.
20 933 She then extends them before her as though the strap on them had been drawn taut.
Swiftly she hurries about, in the graceful, frightened haste of the dancer, her hands seeming to trace the location of the obdurate barriers, those invisible walls which seemed to contain her. She then stood and faced us, and put her head in her hands, bent over, and then straightened her body, her head and hair thrown back. "I?" she seemed to ask, looking out, as though some rude jailer might have come to the gate of her pen. But there is, of course, no one there, and, in the performance of the dance, that is clearly understood. Then, in poignant fantasy, within the pen, she prepares herself for the master, seeming to thoughtfully select silks and jewelry, seeming to apply perfume and cosmetics, seeming to be bedecked in shimmering, diaphanous slave splendor. She then crosses her wrists, and moves them, as though they have been bound. She then extends them before her as though the strap on them had been drawn taut. - (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 20)