Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
397
Her identity is upon her, indisputably and categorically, as perfectly and securely as her collar.
10
398
She is keenly sexual, which she is usually wise enough to conceal from the free woman, lest she be bound and mercilessly whipped, but the free woman suspects this only too well.
10
399
She belongs to a man, as is right for a female, and, accordingly, almost universally, she is radiantly happy.
10
400
How could the free woman forgive her that? Too, perhaps most grievously, she, slave clad and collared, owned, devoted and obedient, eager to please, is incomparably more attractive to men than her rigid, bundled, inhibited, socially constrained free sister.
10
401
The slave girl, in her tunic and collar, is exciting to men, as she is intended to be.
10
402
It is the slave men seek.
10
403
It is the slave men buy.
Her identity is upon her, indisputably and categorically, as perfectly and securely as her collar.
She is keenly sexual, which she is usually wise enough to conceal from the free woman, lest she be bound and mercilessly whipped, but the free woman suspects this only too well.
She belongs to a man, as is right for a female, and, accordingly, almost universally, she is radiantly happy.
How could the free woman forgive her that? Too, perhaps most grievously, she, slave clad and collared, owned, devoted and obedient, eager to please, is incomparably more attractive to men than her rigid, bundled, inhibited, socially constrained free sister.
The slave girl, in her tunic and collar, is exciting to men, as she is intended to be.
It is the slave men seek.
It is the slave men buy.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter )