Book 21. (1 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
25
349
She then cracked the whip again and the slaves sprang to their feet and began to dance before me, as only slaves can dance before men.
She then cracked the whip again and the slaves sprang to their feet and began to dance before me, as only slaves can dance before men.
- (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 25, Sentence #349)
Book 21. (7 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
25
346
I wonder if this is hard for a free woman to understand.
25
347
The woman turned about, and, lifting her whip, signaled to the musicians at the right side of the room.
25
348
They began to play.
25
349
She then cracked the whip again and the slaves sprang to their feet and began to dance before me, as only slaves can dance before men.
25
350
"How meaningless they are," laughed the free woman.
25
351
How incredibly meaningful, how explosively and thunderingly meaningful, how devastatingly meaningful, how momentously significant they were, these females of my species, presenting themselves before me in the modalities incumbent upon them, modalities constituting, as suggested, civilized and delicious refinements of relationships instituted and determined eons ago by nature, modalities which will always, in one way or another, in one nomenclature or another, be required of beautiful women by strong men, modalities most simply and directly thought of, and most honestly thought of, as those of the slave and master.
25
352
One of the glories of the Gorean culture is that it has a body of law, sanctioned by tradition and mercilessly enforced, pertaining, without evasion or subterfuge, to this relationship.
I wonder if this is hard for a free woman to understand.
The woman turned about, and, lifting her whip, signaled to the musicians at the right side of the room.
They began to play.
She then cracked the whip again and the slaves sprang to their feet and began to dance before me, as only slaves can dance before men.
"How meaningless they are," laughed the free woman.
How incredibly meaningful, how explosively and thunderingly meaningful, how devastatingly meaningful, how momentously significant they were, these females of my species, presenting themselves before me in the modalities incumbent upon them, modalities constituting, as suggested, civilized and delicious refinements of relationships instituted and determined eons ago by nature, modalities which will always, in one way or another, in one nomenclature or another, be required of beautiful women by strong men, modalities most simply and directly thought of, and most honestly thought of, as those of the slave and master.
One of the glories of the Gorean culture is that it has a body of law, sanctioned by tradition and mercilessly enforced, pertaining, without evasion or subterfuge, to this relationship.
- (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 25)