Book 25. (1 results) Magicians of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
22
521
What surprised me about Lavinia's obeisance was that it seemed so perfectly to exemplify that of the female slave, literally that of the slave to her master, though it was performed before a male who was not only not her master, but himself a slave.
What surprised me about Lavinia's obeisance was that it seemed so perfectly to exemplify that of the female slave, literally that of the slave to her master, though it was performed before a male who was not only not her master, but himself a slave.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 22, Sentence #521)
Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
22
518
When near him she lifted her head slightly, hardly daring to meet his eyes, and then she knelt before him, as before a master, doing obeisance onto him, her head down to the stones before his golden sandals, the palms of her hands, too, on the stones.
22
519
This was not inappropriate, of course, even though both were slaves, as she was female and he male, and the obeisance thus, manifested in this instance in the persons of slaves, might be regarded simply as that of femaleness to maleness.
22
520
The perfect obeisance, of course, the natural obeisance, that most in accord with nature, and most perfectly manifesting it, is that of the female slave to the free male.
22
521
What surprised me about Lavinia's obeisance was that it seemed so perfectly to exemplify that of the female slave, literally that of the slave to her master, though it was performed before a male who was not only not her master, but himself a slave.
22
522
That I found of interest.
22
523
Did she think he owned her? Too, she did not have to perform such an obeisance in this context.
22
524
It was not, for example, required by custom or prescribed by ordinance.
When near him she lifted her head slightly, hardly daring to meet his eyes, and then she knelt before him, as before a master, doing obeisance onto him, her head down to the stones before his golden sandals, the palms of her hands, too, on the stones.
This was not inappropriate, of course, even though both were slaves, as she was female and he male, and the obeisance thus, manifested in this instance in the persons of slaves, might be regarded simply as that of femaleness to maleness.
The perfect obeisance, of course, the natural obeisance, that most in accord with nature, and most perfectly manifesting it, is that of the female slave to the free male.
What surprised me about Lavinia's obeisance was that it seemed so perfectly to exemplify that of the female slave, literally that of the slave to her master, though it was performed before a male who was not only not her master, but himself a slave.
That I found of interest.
Did she think he owned her? Too, she did not have to perform such an obeisance in this context.
It was not, for example, required by custom or prescribed by ordinance.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 22)