• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"petition "

Book 26. (1 results) Witness of Gor (Individual Quote)

More than once I had, in my former places, bared it to a guard, in mute petition, calling thusly to his attention what I was and what I wanted from him, and what I hoped for from him, and what I needed from him, thusly pleading without words that he might deign to take pity upon me. - (Witness of Gor, Chapter 7, Sentence #150)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
7 150 More than once I had, in my former places, bared it to a guard, in mute petition, calling thusly to his attention what I was and what I wanted from him, and what I hoped for from him, and what I needed from him, thusly pleading without words that he might deign to take pity upon me.

Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
7 147 I had no doubt it much enhanced my beauty.
7 148 Too, of course, it had its symbolic aspects, in its design, and its reality, that it marked me.
7 149 Indeed, sometimes, even thinking of it, I had screamed softly with passion.
7 150 More than once I had, in my former places, bared it to a guard, in mute petition, calling thusly to his attention what I was and what I wanted from him, and what I hoped for from him, and what I needed from him, thusly pleading without words that he might deign to take pity upon me.
7 151 But often they would not so spare my pride and would have me at their feet, licking and kissing, and begging explicitly.
7 152 Then they would either take pity on me, or not, as it pleased them.
7 153 Sometimes, of course, we would be denied human speech.
I had no doubt it much enhanced my beauty. Too, of course, it had its symbolic aspects, in its design, and its reality, that it marked me. Indeed, sometimes, even thinking of it, I had screamed softly with passion. More than once I had, in my former places, bared it to a guard, in mute petition, calling thusly to his attention what I was and what I wanted from him, and what I hoped for from him, and what I needed from him, thusly pleading without words that he might deign to take pity upon me. But often they would not so spare my pride and would have me at their feet, licking and kissing, and begging explicitly. Then they would either take pity on me, or not, as it pleased them. Sometimes, of course, we would be denied human speech. - (Witness of Gor, Chapter 7)