Book 22. (1 results) Dancer of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
319
I had belled myself as might have a slave, who knows that her bells must be on her tightly, firstly for psychological reasons, that she knows herself belled, and is conscious of all the erotic and humiliating richness of this, she, a belled animal, and secondly and thirdly, of course, for mechanical reasons, that they be responsive to her slightest movements, as in the slowest, subtlest portions of her dance, and will not slip, or come loose, in the more rapid portions of her dance, despite her swiftest gyrations.
I had belled myself as might have a slave, who knows that her bells must be on her tightly, firstly for psychological reasons, that she knows herself belled, and is conscious of all the erotic and humiliating richness of this, she, a belled animal, and secondly and thirdly, of course, for mechanical reasons, that they be responsive to her slightest movements, as in the slowest, subtlest portions of her dance, and will not slip, or come loose, in the more rapid portions of her dance, despite her swiftest gyrations.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 3, Sentence #319)
Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
316
Then I hid again, between two shelves, and fumbled feverishly in the darkness with the tie on my bells.
3
317
I could do nothing with it in the darkness.
3
318
I had belled myself well, I thought bitterly.
3
319
I had belled myself as might have a slave, who knows that her bells must be on her tightly, firstly for psychological reasons, that she knows herself belled, and is conscious of all the erotic and humiliating richness of this, she, a belled animal, and secondly and thirdly, of course, for mechanical reasons, that they be responsive to her slightest movements, as in the slowest, subtlest portions of her dance, and will not slip, or come loose, in the more rapid portions of her dance, despite her swiftest gyrations.
3
320
I wept.
3
321
I could not free the bells.
3
322
Even as I tried they would make their tiny sounds.
Then I hid again, between two shelves, and fumbled feverishly in the darkness with the tie on my bells.
I could do nothing with it in the darkness.
I had belled myself well, I thought bitterly.
I had belled myself as might have a slave, who knows that her bells must be on her tightly, firstly for psychological reasons, that she knows herself belled, and is conscious of all the erotic and humiliating richness of this, she, a belled animal, and secondly and thirdly, of course, for mechanical reasons, that they be responsive to her slightest movements, as in the slowest, subtlest portions of her dance, and will not slip, or come loose, in the more rapid portions of her dance, despite her swiftest gyrations.
I wept.
I could not free the bells.
Even as I tried they would make their tiny sounds.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 3)