Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
21
865
"Perhaps not," I said, "else, after a time, they would not love it so".
"Perhaps not," I said, "else, after a time, they would not love it so".
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 21, Sentence #865)
Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
21
862
"And are not those the very women who first bare their breasts to conquerors and beg the privilege of licking their feet?" "Perhaps, upon occasion," said Aemilianus.
21
863
"If it were truly a fate worse than death," I said, "or even so miserable or unfortunate a lot, it seems it would be very hard to understand their happiness, their emotional fulfillments, their ecstasies, their willingness to die for their masters".
21
864
"Perhaps then," he said, "for all its demands and duties, it is not truly a fate worse than death".
21
865
"Perhaps not," I said, "else, after a time, they would not love it so".
21
866
"Perhaps those who would foolishly call it so do so only in their attempts to dissuade themselves from their desperate fascination with it, and longing for it".
21
867
"Perhaps," I said.
21
868
"At any rate," he smiled, "let them not make pronouncements on such matters until they have had some experience of that of which they speak, until they have had for a time, so to speak, the collar on their own necks".
"And are not those the very women who first bare their breasts to conquerors and beg the privilege of licking their feet?" "Perhaps, upon occasion," said Aemilianus.
"If it were truly a fate worse than death," I said, "or even so miserable or unfortunate a lot, it seems it would be very hard to understand their happiness, their emotional fulfillments, their ecstasies, their willingness to die for their masters".
"Perhaps then," he said, "for all its demands and duties, it is not truly a fate worse than death".
"Perhaps not," I said, "else, after a time, they would not love it so".
"Perhaps those who would foolishly call it so do so only in their attempts to dissuade themselves from their desperate fascination with it, and longing for it".
"Perhaps," I said.
"At any rate," he smiled, "let them not make pronouncements on such matters until they have had some experience of that of which they speak, until they have had for a time, so to speak, the collar on their own necks".
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 21)