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"honor "

Book 18. (1 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Individual Quote)

She had been sentenced to honor and dignity, and equality with the pathetic males of the compound. - (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 13, Sentence #231)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
13 231 She had been sentenced to honor and dignity, and equality with the pathetic males of the compound.

Book 18. (7 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
13 228 How marvelous and beautiful are women! How glorious it is to own them, to be able to do what one wishes with them and to love them! But then I thought soberly of she who had once been the Lady Mira, of Venna, who had once, as the agent of Kurii, been my enemy.
13 229 No such fulfillments and joys, it seemed, were for her.
13 230 She had been condemned instead to the compounds of the Waniyanpi.
13 231 She had been sentenced to honor and dignity, and equality with the pathetic males of the compound.
13 232 She would not know, it seemed, the joys of being run, naked, a rope on her neck, a slave, at the flanks of a master's kaiila, the pleasures of, tremblingly, loving and serving, knowing that he whom one loves and serves owns one, fully, the fulfillments of finding oneself, uncompromisingly and irrevocably, in one's place in the order of nature, lovingly, at one's master's feet.
13 233 "We shall come back later," said Cuwignaka to Canka, getting up.
13 234 But, Canka, too, I fear, lost in the sweetnesses and beauties, in the love and pleasure, of his woman, did not hear us.
How marvelous and beautiful are women! How glorious it is to own them, to be able to do what one wishes with them and to love them! But then I thought soberly of she who had once been the Lady Mira, of Venna, who had once, as the agent of Kurii, been my enemy. No such fulfillments and joys, it seemed, were for her. She had been condemned instead to the compounds of the Waniyanpi. She had been sentenced to honor and dignity, and equality with the pathetic males of the compound. She would not know, it seemed, the joys of being run, naked, a rope on her neck, a slave, at the flanks of a master's kaiila, the pleasures of, tremblingly, loving and serving, knowing that he whom one loves and serves owns one, fully, the fulfillments of finding oneself, uncompromisingly and irrevocably, in one's place in the order of nature, lovingly, at one's master's feet. "We shall come back later," said Cuwignaka to Canka, getting up. But, Canka, too, I fear, lost in the sweetnesses and beauties, in the love and pleasure, of his woman, did not hear us. - (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 13)