Book 21. (1 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
5
459
A girl may begin by fighting the chain which holds her to the ring at the foot of the master's couch, but she will soon hold it lovingly, and kiss it softly.
A girl may begin by fighting the chain which holds her to the ring at the foot of the master's couch, but she will soon hold it lovingly, and kiss it softly.
- (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 5, Sentence #459)
Book 21. (7 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
5
456
Female slaves are cheap; sleen are not.
5
457
Once this sort of thing is understood, one begins to realize something of the psychology involved, certainly at the least that it would be a mistake to overlook or underestimate the psychological concomitants of binding, chaining, and such.
5
458
These things speak of the equations of nature, of dimorphism, of complementarity, of the desire and need to possess and the desire and need to be possessed, of the joys of the mastery on the part of the man and the ecstasy of being overwhelmed, audaciously ravished, dominated, and owned, literally owned, on the part of the woman, of having no choice other than to submit, and wholly, to yield unqualifiedly as she must, as no more than what she then is, a helplessly aroused, begging, meaningless slave.
5
459
A girl may begin by fighting the chain which holds her to the ring at the foot of the master's couch, but she will soon hold it lovingly, and kiss it softly.
5
460
Being put where her master wishes her means much to her.
5
461
That is where she wants to be.
5
462
And even if she did not wish it that is where nonetheless she will be, for he has put her there, on her chain.
Female slaves are cheap; sleen are not.
Once this sort of thing is understood, one begins to realize something of the psychology involved, certainly at the least that it would be a mistake to overlook or underestimate the psychological concomitants of binding, chaining, and such.
These things speak of the equations of nature, of dimorphism, of complementarity, of the desire and need to possess and the desire and need to be possessed, of the joys of the mastery on the part of the man and the ecstasy of being overwhelmed, audaciously ravished, dominated, and owned, literally owned, on the part of the woman, of having no choice other than to submit, and wholly, to yield unqualifiedly as she must, as no more than what she then is, a helplessly aroused, begging, meaningless slave.
A girl may begin by fighting the chain which holds her to the ring at the foot of the master's couch, but she will soon hold it lovingly, and kiss it softly.
Being put where her master wishes her means much to her.
That is where she wants to be.
And even if she did not wish it that is where nonetheless she will be, for he has put her there, on her chain.
- (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 5)