Book 26. (1 results) Witness of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
32
32
But what would even our beauty, and our hope to please, to be spared to serve, avail ourselves with these men? And we had perhaps, they might judge, seen too much.
But what would even our beauty, and our hope to please, to be spared to serve, avail ourselves with these men? And we had perhaps, they might judge, seen too much.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 32, Sentence #32)
Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
32
29
We dared not meet his eyes.
32
30
I think there was not one of us who would not then have rather, a thousand times over, been elsewhere, almost anywhere, in the heaviest of chains in the foulest of dungeons; pitching, sick, bound to our pallets, almost immobile, in the holds of stinking slave ships, covered with vermin; sweating in the mills, chained to our looms; carrying water, shackled, in the fields; even drawing sleds or wagons, padlocked in our harnesses, draft beasts.
32
31
But we were beautiful, and a different sort of slave.
32
32
But what would even our beauty, and our hope to please, to be spared to serve, avail ourselves with these men? And we had perhaps, they might judge, seen too much.
32
33
The leader of the strangers turned away from us.
32
34
The black-tunicked men then, following him, withdrew from the cell.
32
35
The officer of Treve followed them.
We dared not meet his eyes.
I think there was not one of us who would not then have rather, a thousand times over, been elsewhere, almost anywhere, in the heaviest of chains in the foulest of dungeons; pitching, sick, bound to our pallets, almost immobile, in the holds of stinking slave ships, covered with vermin; sweating in the mills, chained to our looms; carrying water, shackled, in the fields; even drawing sleds or wagons, padlocked in our harnesses, draft beasts.
But we were beautiful, and a different sort of slave.
But what would even our beauty, and our hope to please, to be spared to serve, avail ourselves with these men? And we had perhaps, they might judge, seen too much.
The leader of the strangers turned away from us.
The black-tunicked men then, following him, withdrew from the cell.
The officer of Treve followed them.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter 32)