Book 22. (1 results) Dancer of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
24
115
In it the slave usually offers the master not only drink, say, the wine in the cup, but also, implicitly, the wine of her love, body and beauty.
In it the slave usually offers the master not only drink, say, the wine in the cup, but also, implicitly, the wine of her love, body and beauty.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 24, Sentence #115)
Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
24
112
It was appropriate that I knelt, as I was a slave, and they were free, though currently bound, justly or unjustly, in servitude.
24
113
It is common, incidentally, for a slave to kneel before free men in serving them drink.
24
114
"wine, Master?" is a common expression.
24
115
In it the slave usually offers the master not only drink, say, the wine in the cup, but also, implicitly, the wine of her love, body and beauty.
24
116
I had begged not to serve this chain.
24
117
My pleas had been ignored, or mocked.
24
118
If they had no concern for my feelings, had they, too, no concern with their employer's property, that they would subject it to such risk? Then I recalled that Ionicus of Cos had paid more for me, a great deal more, than is common for a female work slave, and that this had to do with his "amusement".
It was appropriate that I knelt, as I was a slave, and they were free, though currently bound, justly or unjustly, in servitude.
It is common, incidentally, for a slave to kneel before free men in serving them drink.
"wine, Master?" is a common expression.
In it the slave usually offers the master not only drink, say, the wine in the cup, but also, implicitly, the wine of her love, body and beauty.
I had begged not to serve this chain.
My pleas had been ignored, or mocked.
If they had no concern for my feelings, had they, too, no concern with their employer's property, that they would subject it to such risk? Then I recalled that Ionicus of Cos had paid more for me, a great deal more, than is common for a female work slave, and that this had to do with his "amusement".
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 24)