Book 26. (1 results) Witness of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
4
325
What did it mean, that my belly was beneath the chain? I would later become extremely familiar with such positions, but they were, at the time, quite new to me, and somewhat frightening.
What did it mean, that my belly was beneath the chain? I would later become extremely familiar with such positions, but they were, at the time, quite new to me, and somewhat frightening.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 4, Sentence #325)
Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
4
322
There was my belly, with its rounded softness, and, over it, the chain, its links now warmed by my own flesh, but still, though flesh-warmed links of steel, inflexible and merciless.
4
323
My belly, I had been informed, was beneath the chain.
4
324
I did not dare to move.
4
325
What did it mean, that my belly was beneath the chain? I would later become extremely familiar with such positions, but they were, at the time, quite new to me, and somewhat frightening.
4
326
What most frightened me about them was the way they made me feel.
4
327
It was not merely that, in them, I felt profoundly stirred.
4
328
In them, helplessly, vulnerably, I also sensed a personal rightness.
There was my belly, with its rounded softness, and, over it, the chain, its links now warmed by my own flesh, but still, though flesh-warmed links of steel, inflexible and merciless.
My belly, I had been informed, was beneath the chain.
I did not dare to move.
What did it mean, that my belly was beneath the chain? I would later become extremely familiar with such positions, but they were, at the time, quite new to me, and somewhat frightening.
What most frightened me about them was the way they made me feel.
It was not merely that, in them, I felt profoundly stirred.
In them, helplessly, vulnerably, I also sensed a personal rightness.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 4)