Book 22. (1 results) Dancer of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
9
292
When I heard this categorization, so matter-of-factly given, concluding the fellow's recounting of attributes and features, measurements, and such, I was suddenly, inordinately, startled.
When I heard this categorization, so matter-of-factly given, concluding the fellow's recounting of attributes and features, measurements, and such, I was suddenly, inordinately, startled.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 9, Sentence #292)
Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
9
289
I was alone.
9
290
What was I doing here? Why was I brought here, to this world? My wrists hurt, held up so high in the steel.
9
291
Were the men not being cruel to me? Could they not see I was naked, and helpless? "Category," I heard, "—Pleasure Slave".
9
292
When I heard this categorization, so matter-of-factly given, concluding the fellow's recounting of attributes and features, measurements, and such, I was suddenly, inordinately, startled.
9
293
I had known, of course, I was not a house slave, or a tower slave, for I was not permitted to kneel in fashions appropriate to those varieties of slave.
9
294
Too, I had understood, of course, that many of the things I was taught seemed to have direct application to the pleasing of masters, and even profoundly sensuously so, but I had not, until now, heard that exact simple, direct expression.
9
295
We had never been told, in so many words, that that was the sort of slave we were.
I was alone.
What was I doing here? Why was I brought here, to this world? My wrists hurt, held up so high in the steel.
Were the men not being cruel to me? Could they not see I was naked, and helpless? "Category," I heard, "—Pleasure Slave".
When I heard this categorization, so matter-of-factly given, concluding the fellow's recounting of attributes and features, measurements, and such, I was suddenly, inordinately, startled.
I had known, of course, I was not a house slave, or a tower slave, for I was not permitted to kneel in fashions appropriate to those varieties of slave.
Too, I had understood, of course, that many of the things I was taught seemed to have direct application to the pleasing of masters, and even profoundly sensuously so, but I had not, until now, heard that exact simple, direct expression.
We had never been told, in so many words, that that was the sort of slave we were.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 9)