Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
6
369
"Then," she said, "he could keep me here as long as he wants! I could be kept here at his mercy, in this terrible place, as long as it is his will!" "You might, of course, be redeemed," I pointed out.
"Then," she said, "he could keep me here as long as he wants! I could be kept here at his mercy, in this terrible place, as long as it is his will!" "You might, of course, be redeemed," I pointed out.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #369)
Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
6
366
"Yes," I said.
6
367
"In this way the keeper gets some good out of you.
6
368
Too, in this way he is less likely to lose money on, say, your feed".
6
369
"Then," she said, "he could keep me here as long as he wants! I could be kept here at his mercy, in this terrible place, as long as it is his will!" "You might, of course, be redeemed," I pointed out.
6
370
"Yes!" she said, eagerly.
6
371
"I must find a splendid gentleman, and piteously beg that!" I did not, personally, think she would now be as successful in that sort of thing as she might have been earlier, when fully clothed.
6
372
It is one thing for a free woman, tearfully, while in the dignity of robes and veil, to attempt to impose on a fellow's gullibility or good nature, and quite another for her to do so when she is unclothed.
"Yes," I said.
"In this way the keeper gets some good out of you.
Too, in this way he is less likely to lose money on, say, your feed".
"Then," she said, "he could keep me here as long as he wants! I could be kept here at his mercy, in this terrible place, as long as it is his will!" "You might, of course, be redeemed," I pointed out.
"Yes!" she said, eagerly.
"I must find a splendid gentleman, and piteously beg that!" I did not, personally, think she would now be as successful in that sort of thing as she might have been earlier, when fully clothed.
It is one thing for a free woman, tearfully, while in the dignity of robes and veil, to attempt to impose on a fellow's gullibility or good nature, and quite another for her to do so when she is unclothed.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 6)