• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"male " "slave "

Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 91 In the mirror there was a different woman than the world knew of me, one they had never seen, one they had never suspected.
1 92 What was that thing she wore? What sort of garment could that be, so delicious and brief, so excruciatingly and uncompromisingly feminine? Surely no real woman, hostile, unloving, demanding, shrill and frustrated, zealous in her conformance to stereotypes, attempting desperately to find satisfaction in such things, would wear such a garment.
1 93 It was too female, too feminine.
1 94 How could she be identical to a male in such a garment? It would show her simply that she was not.
1 95 How could she keep her dignity and respect in such a garment? She could not.
1 96 It would show that she was beautifully, and utterly and profoundly different from a man.
1 97 It was the sort of garment a man might throw to a woman to wear, amused to see her in it.
In the mirror there was a different woman than the world knew of me, one they had never seen, one they had never suspected. What was that thing she wore? What sort of garment could that be, so delicious and brief, so excruciatingly and uncompromisingly feminine? Surely no real woman, hostile, unloving, demanding, shrill and frustrated, zealous in her conformance to stereotypes, attempting desperately to find satisfaction in such things, would wear such a garment. It was too female, too feminine. How could she be identical to a male in such a garment? It would show her simply that she was not. How could she keep her dignity and respect in such a garment? She could not. It would show that she was beautifully, and utterly and profoundly different from a man. It was the sort of garment a man might throw to a woman to wear, amused to see her in it. - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter )