• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"appeal "

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

Would she then seem so outstanding? Or might not other girls, here and there, more appeal to one man or another?" "I see what Master is saying," said Lavinia. - (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 21, Sentence #519)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 519 Would she then seem so outstanding? Or might not other girls, here and there, more appeal to one man or another?" "I see what Master is saying," said Lavinia.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 516 "Suppose," I said, "that she were not free, that she were not Ubara.
21 517 Suppose, rather, that she were one slave amongst others, lovely slaves all, chained to a wall.
21 518 Or suppose that she was paraded in a line, with other slaves, excellent slaves all, on all fours, in neck coffle, the chains going back under the slaves' bodies and between their legs, rising to the collar of the next in line, and so on, before a conqueror's chair.
21 519 Would she then seem so outstanding? Or might not other girls, here and there, more appeal to one man or another?" "I see what Master is saying," said Lavinia.
21 520 "If she were a captured Ubara," I said, "and auctioned before Ubars, doubtless her price would be high, perhaps thousands of tarn disks, but if she were unknown, and only one slave on a chain with others, and it were she alone, the girl alone, only herself, so to speak, who was to ascend the block, hurried by the gesture of the auctioneer's whip, what would she bring?" "I do not know, Master," said Lavinia.
21 521 "Perhaps two or three silver tarsks," I said.
21 522 "Surely Master jests," she said.
"Suppose," I said, "that she were not free, that she were not Ubara. Suppose, rather, that she were one slave amongst others, lovely slaves all, chained to a wall. Or suppose that she was paraded in a line, with other slaves, excellent slaves all, on all fours, in neck coffle, the chains going back under the slaves' bodies and between their legs, rising to the collar of the next in line, and so on, before a conqueror's chair. Would she then seem so outstanding? Or might not other girls, here and there, more appeal to one man or another?" "I see what Master is saying," said Lavinia. "If she were a captured Ubara," I said, "and auctioned before Ubars, doubtless her price would be high, perhaps thousands of tarn disks, but if she were unknown, and only one slave on a chain with others, and it were she alone, the girl alone, only herself, so to speak, who was to ascend the block, hurried by the gesture of the auctioneer's whip, what would she bring?" "I do not know, Master," said Lavinia. "Perhaps two or three silver tarsks," I said. "Surely Master jests," she said. - (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 21)