Book 24. (1 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
258
Sometimes they vent their anger on the slave, with blows and lashings, though it seems to me the blame, if any, in such cases, is perhaps less with the slave than the master.
Sometimes they vent their anger on the slave, with blows and lashings, though it seems to me the blame, if any, in such cases, is perhaps less with the slave than the master.
- (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 12, Sentence #258)
Book 24. (7 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
255
Also she soon longs for the openness of bondage, that her inward truth may now be publicly proclaimed, that she may now appear before the world, and be shown before the world, as what she is, a slave.
12
256
Sometimes this is done in a plaza, or other public place, with a public stripping by her master.
12
257
It is dangerous, sometimes, to be a secret slave, then revealed, for Goreans do not like to be duped.
12
258
Sometimes they vent their anger on the slave, with blows and lashings, though it seems to me the blame, if any, in such cases, is perhaps less with the slave than the master.
12
259
To be sure, she probably suggested her secret enslavement to begin with, perhaps even begging it.
12
260
In any event, she is normally joyful to at last, publicly, be permitted to kneel before her master.
12
261
By the time it is done, of course, many, from behavioral cues, will have already detected, or suspected, the truth.
Also she soon longs for the openness of bondage, that her inward truth may now be publicly proclaimed, that she may now appear before the world, and be shown before the world, as what she is, a slave.
Sometimes this is done in a plaza, or other public place, with a public stripping by her master.
It is dangerous, sometimes, to be a secret slave, then revealed, for Goreans do not like to be duped.
Sometimes they vent their anger on the slave, with blows and lashings, though it seems to me the blame, if any, in such cases, is perhaps less with the slave than the master.
To be sure, she probably suggested her secret enslavement to begin with, perhaps even begging it.
In any event, she is normally joyful to at last, publicly, be permitted to kneel before her master.
By the time it is done, of course, many, from behavioral cues, will have already detected, or suspected, the truth.
- (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 12)