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

Has she not broken their implicit pact, uttered that which is unspeakable, neither to acknowledge that love could exist between such disparate beings as they, a free man, a lordly fellow, one with a Home Stone, and a mere beast, an animal, collared, a degraded, meaningless slave. - (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 20, Sentence #1836)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
20 1836 Has she not broken their implicit pact, uttered that which is unspeakable, neither to acknowledge that love could exist between such disparate beings as they, a free man, a lordly fellow, one with a home stone, and a mere beast, an animal, collared, a degraded, meaningless slave.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
20 1833 The slave is timid, but radiant; the master is angry, and determined to resist his feelings.
20 1834 In the end, perhaps, the slave can resist no longer and bespeaks her love for the master.
20 1835 Perhaps he will then, in fury, whip her and sell her.
20 1836 Has she not broken their implicit pact, uttered that which is unspeakable, neither to acknowledge that love could exist between such disparate beings as they, a free man, a lordly fellow, one with a home stone, and a mere beast, an animal, collared, a degraded, meaningless slave.
20 1837 What audacity she had to express her love, that of a mere slave, for a free man! Surely he should bracelet her small wrists behind her back, and hood her, and leash her, and then lead her hastily, angrily, to the nearest market.
20 1838 Certainly she cannot think him foolish enough to reciprocate such feelings.
20 1839 She is only a slave! How insulting, to suggest that he, a free man, might care for a mere slave! He can buy a dozen like her in the market! But perhaps he accepts her as his love slave, and she, to her joy, realizes he is now her love master.
The slave is timid, but radiant; the master is angry, and determined to resist his feelings. In the end, perhaps, the slave can resist no longer and bespeaks her love for the master. Perhaps he will then, in fury, whip her and sell her. Has she not broken their implicit pact, uttered that which is unspeakable, neither to acknowledge that love could exist between such disparate beings as they, a free man, a lordly fellow, one with a home stone, and a mere beast, an animal, collared, a degraded, meaningless slave. What audacity she had to express her love, that of a mere slave, for a free man! Surely he should bracelet her small wrists behind her back, and hood her, and leash her, and then lead her hastily, angrily, to the nearest market. Certainly she cannot think him foolish enough to reciprocate such feelings. She is only a slave! How insulting, to suggest that he, a free man, might care for a mere slave! He can buy a dozen like her in the market! But perhaps he accepts her as his love slave, and she, to her joy, realizes he is now her love master. - (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 20)