Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
21
840
But perhaps, rather, in time, who knows, they will both find love, he finding it kneeling before him, she in her chains finding it standing before her.
But perhaps, rather, in time, who knows, they will both find love, he finding it kneeling before him, she in her chains finding it standing before her.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 21, Sentence #840)
Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
21
837
Her rape then is not intended to be a pleasant but ephemeral pleasuring, the seizure of a snack of female, but rather an appetizer, merely the first course in a feast of subdued female, a banquet of conquered woman.
21
838
At his feet she will have a plenitude of time to regret her possible indiscretions, a plenitude of time to learn her collar.
21
839
He wants her so much, you see, that he will own her, at least until he tires of her, and will then sell her, or give her away.
21
840
But perhaps, rather, in time, who knows, they will both find love, he finding it kneeling before him, she in her chains finding it standing before her.
21
841
But perhaps her haughtiness or insolence was calculated, that is, on some deep level, one not even fully accessible to her conscious mind, calculated to win her rape at his hands, being a way, not fully understood by her, at least at the time, to petition his collar.
21
842
There are many ways a woman can display herself to a man.
21
843
This is clear even to the free woman.
Her rape then is not intended to be a pleasant but ephemeral pleasuring, the seizure of a snack of female, but rather an appetizer, merely the first course in a feast of subdued female, a banquet of conquered woman.
At his feet she will have a plenitude of time to regret her possible indiscretions, a plenitude of time to learn her collar.
He wants her so much, you see, that he will own her, at least until he tires of her, and will then sell her, or give her away.
But perhaps, rather, in time, who knows, they will both find love, he finding it kneeling before him, she in her chains finding it standing before her.
But perhaps her haughtiness or insolence was calculated, that is, on some deep level, one not even fully accessible to her conscious mind, calculated to win her rape at his hands, being a way, not fully understood by her, at least at the time, to petition his collar.
There are many ways a woman can display herself to a man.
This is clear even to the free woman.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 21)