Book 22. (1 results) Dancer of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
309
I had been gagged, and hooded and manacled, and put on my belly, because the first sight of such a beast, at close hand, I was told, not unoften, in its size and ferocity, and terribleness, produces a miasma of terror in a female, and she is unwilling even to approach it, whips being often necessary.
I had been gagged, and hooded and manacled, and put on my belly, because the first sight of such a beast, at close hand, I was told, not unoften, in its size and ferocity, and terribleness, produces a miasma of terror in a female, and she is unwilling even to approach it, whips being often necessary.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #309)
Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
306
I lay trembling in the dirt, helpless, the man's foot on my back.
10
307
I would learn it was indeed a large bird, one called a "tarn".
10
308
And, I would later learn, it was not even a warrior's mount, bred for swiftness and aggressiveness, a war tarn, but a mere draft tarn.
10
309
I had been gagged, and hooded and manacled, and put on my belly, because the first sight of such a beast, at close hand, I was told, not unoften, in its size and ferocity, and terribleness, produces a miasma of terror in a female, and she is unwilling even to approach it, whips being often necessary.
10
310
Happily I was unaware of the full terror within whose orbit I lay.
10
311
I was pulled to my feet by an arm and walked for a few feet and then put down, on my back, on a blanket, on the ground.
10
312
This blanket was wrapped about me, closely.
I lay trembling in the dirt, helpless, the man's foot on my back.
I would learn it was indeed a large bird, one called a "tarn".
And, I would later learn, it was not even a warrior's mount, bred for swiftness and aggressiveness, a war tarn, but a mere draft tarn.
I had been gagged, and hooded and manacled, and put on my belly, because the first sight of such a beast, at close hand, I was told, not unoften, in its size and ferocity, and terribleness, produces a miasma of terror in a female, and she is unwilling even to approach it, whips being often necessary.
Happily I was unaware of the full terror within whose orbit I lay.
I was pulled to my feet by an arm and walked for a few feet and then put down, on my back, on a blanket, on the ground.
This blanket was wrapped about me, closely.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 10)