Book 26. (1 results) Witness of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
4
347
But there are various positions, kneeling and otherwise, and each has many significances.
But there are various positions, kneeling and otherwise, and each has many significances.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 4, Sentence #347)
Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
4
344
This makes clear our vulnerability.
4
345
My own thighs felt inflamed at this exposure.
4
346
Had someone so much as touched me with the tip of his finger I think I might have screamed.
4
347
But there are various positions, kneeling and otherwise, and each has many significances.
4
348
Why were we now kneeling here, unattended to? Had we been forgotten? Must we wait, as though we might be nothing? I could hear the men speaking.
4
349
Were they discussing us? Were they commenting on us? Might I, or some of the others, be being spoken of, in particular? Were they consulting records, were they checking off items on a list, or perhaps making entries? We knelt, becoming more and more sensitive to our position, absorbing more and more deeply into our very beings and bellies its nature.
4
350
We knelt, chained, unclothed, fastened together by the neck, in a primitive corridor, heavy doors to the sides, doors to damp, straw-strewn cells or kennels, from which we had been removed.
This makes clear our vulnerability.
My own thighs felt inflamed at this exposure.
Had someone so much as touched me with the tip of his finger I think I might have screamed.
But there are various positions, kneeling and otherwise, and each has many significances.
Why were we now kneeling here, unattended to? Had we been forgotten? Must we wait, as though we might be nothing? I could hear the men speaking.
Were they discussing us? Were they commenting on us? Might I, or some of the others, be being spoken of, in particular? Were they consulting records, were they checking off items on a list, or perhaps making entries? We knelt, becoming more and more sensitive to our position, absorbing more and more deeply into our very beings and bellies its nature.
We knelt, chained, unclothed, fastened together by the neck, in a primitive corridor, heavy doors to the sides, doors to damp, straw-strewn cells or kennels, from which we had been removed.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 4)