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"dance "

Book 25. (1 results) Magicians of Gor (Individual Quote)

If the party grows wilder, and the drinking heavier, one or more of the slaves will dance. - (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 9, Sentence #581)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
9 581 If the party grows wilder, and the drinking heavier, one or more of the slaves will dance.

Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
9 578 And do not think the girls are insensitive to these nuances, and how they are viewed.
9 579 One of the great pleasures of a slave, I fear, is to know how beautiful she is, how exciting she is, and to know only too well how she is seen by men.
9 580 Here, perhaps, if music is desired, and one's slave is not accomplished, one or more flute girls might be brought in, perhaps hired from a feast house, who will furnish unobtrusive, pleasant airs.
9 581 If the party grows wilder, and the drinking heavier, one or more of the slaves will dance.
9 582 A third form of banquet, which we hesitate to delineate, but feel it would not be amiss to mention, is that in which victories are likely to be celebrated.
9 583 In such banquets the former free women of the enemy serve, clad only in collars.
9 584 Sometimes the defeated administrator or ubar is forced to witness such a banquet, from a throne, clad in his robes of state, a throne set just below that of his conqueror.
And do not think the girls are insensitive to these nuances, and how they are viewed. One of the great pleasures of a slave, I fear, is to know how beautiful she is, how exciting she is, and to know only too well how she is seen by men. Here, perhaps, if music is desired, and one's slave is not accomplished, one or more flute girls might be brought in, perhaps hired from a feast house, who will furnish unobtrusive, pleasant airs. If the party grows wilder, and the drinking heavier, one or more of the slaves will dance. A third form of banquet, which we hesitate to delineate, but feel it would not be amiss to mention, is that in which victories are likely to be celebrated. In such banquets the former free women of the enemy serve, clad only in collars. Sometimes the defeated administrator or ubar is forced to witness such a banquet, from a throne, clad in his robes of state, a throne set just below that of his conqueror. - (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 9)