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Book 22. (1 results) Dancer of Gor (Individual Quote)

"Our masters, the beasts, the brutes, those who put us in collars, and make us kneel, those from whose largesse we must hope they will grant us a pan of food or a rag, those whose whips we must fear, do so," she said. - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 24, Sentence #510)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
24 510 "Our masters, the beasts, the brutes, those who put us in collars, and make us kneel, those from whose largesse we must hope they will grant us a pan of food or a rag, those whose whips we must fear, do so," she said.

Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
24 507 "That is unnatural," I said.
24 508 "Is it so surprising," she asked, "that a beast might walk upright?" I looked at her.
24 509 "Or even that they should walk in power and pride?" "I do not understand," I said.
24 510 "Our masters, the beasts, the brutes, those who put us in collars, and make us kneel, those from whose largesse we must hope they will grant us a pan of food or a rag, those whose whips we must fear, do so," she said.
24 511 "Yes," I breathed.
24 512 "They do!" Our masters, the magnificent beasts, so powerful, so free, so liberated and masculine, so glorious in their untrammeled manhood, so uncompromising with us, did so.
24 513 "But this thing, I think," she said, "is not such a beast, not a human beast, not a man in the full power of his intelligence, vitality and animality, but some other sort of beast, something perhaps similar somehow, but very different, too".
"That is unnatural," I said. "Is it so surprising," she asked, "that a beast might walk upright?" I looked at her. "Or even that they should walk in power and pride?" "I do not understand," I said. "Our masters, the beasts, the brutes, those who put us in collars, and make us kneel, those from whose largesse we must hope they will grant us a pan of food or a rag, those whose whips we must fear, do so," she said. "Yes," I breathed. "They do!" Our masters, the magnificent beasts, so powerful, so free, so liberated and masculine, so glorious in their untrammeled manhood, so uncompromising with us, did so. "But this thing, I think," she said, "is not such a beast, not a human beast, not a man in the full power of his intelligence, vitality and animality, but some other sort of beast, something perhaps similar somehow, but very different, too". - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 24)