Book 22. (1 results) Dancer of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
260
Perhaps those who had smote their goblets on the tables and called for me, had, as much as anything, been voicing a natural disgruntlement at the unwritten customs which seemed to govern such affairs, at the institution of a time to be set aside for the whetting of appetites.
Perhaps those who had smote their goblets on the tables and called for me, had, as much as anything, been voicing a natural disgruntlement at the unwritten customs which seemed to govern such affairs, at the institution of a time to be set aside for the whetting of appetites.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 11, Sentence #260)
Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
257
I did not want to feel the lash.
11
258
The men seemed now to be fairly quiet outside.
11
259
Perhaps most of them did not expect me, really, to be brought out on the stroke of the nineteenth bar.
11
260
Perhaps those who had smote their goblets on the tables and called for me, had, as much as anything, been voicing a natural disgruntlement at the unwritten customs which seemed to govern such affairs, at the institution of a time to be set aside for the whetting of appetites.
11
261
I supposed that there would have to be a judicious sense of timing involved in such matters, that the time must be long enough to bring the audience to a point of eager readiness, perhaps even impatience, without, on the other hand, dallying so long that they became unruly or hostile.
11
262
I assumed that the house must know what it was doing in these matters.
11
263
Doubtless I was not the first girl to be conducted out onto that floor, and probably not even the first Earth girl.
I did not want to feel the lash.
The men seemed now to be fairly quiet outside.
Perhaps most of them did not expect me, really, to be brought out on the stroke of the nineteenth bar.
Perhaps those who had smote their goblets on the tables and called for me, had, as much as anything, been voicing a natural disgruntlement at the unwritten customs which seemed to govern such affairs, at the institution of a time to be set aside for the whetting of appetites.
I supposed that there would have to be a judicious sense of timing involved in such matters, that the time must be long enough to bring the audience to a point of eager readiness, perhaps even impatience, without, on the other hand, dallying so long that they became unruly or hostile.
I assumed that the house must know what it was doing in these matters.
Doubtless I was not the first girl to be conducted out onto that floor, and probably not even the first Earth girl.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 11)