Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
44
174
"No," she said, "I have a thousand heats and a thousand flames!" "Do you think you could please a man?" asked the first man.
44
175
"Desperately and fervently," she said, "in all the ways that a woman can please a man! I beg only the opportunity to show you!" "Let us leave her fate in the hands of the other slave," suggested the second man.
44
176
"No, no, no!" cried Aynur, turning white.
44
177
"No, master! Please, no, master!" "But she was first girl over the other slave," said the first man.
44
178
"So much the better," said the second man.
44
179
"You were, as I understand it," said the first man to Aynur, who seemed now unable to rise even to her knees, "a poor first girl, one not only unpopular in the garden, but even one richly hated therein, one who ruled it strictly and cruelly, personally, arbitrarily, using your modicum of power as an opportunity to satisfy your vanity, bestowing favors on your sycophants, indulging in petty vendettas, stealing from, and abusing, those whom you disliked.
44
180
Too, you tried to seek power from guards, and even, through them, to contact, and influence, others, others, even, outside the house.
"No," she said, "I have a thousand heats and a thousand flames!" "Do you think you could please a man?" asked the first man.
"Desperately and fervently," she said, "in all the ways that a woman can please a man! I beg only the opportunity to show you!" "Let us leave her fate in the hands of the other slave," suggested the second man.
"No, no, no!" cried Aynur, turning white.
"No, master! Please, no, master!" "But she was first girl over the other slave," said the first man.
"So much the better," said the second man.
"You were, as I understand it," said the first man to Aynur, who seemed now unable to rise even to her knees, "a poor first girl, one not only unpopular in the garden, but even one richly hated therein, one who ruled it strictly and cruelly, personally, arbitrarily, using your modicum of power as an opportunity to satisfy your vanity, bestowing favors on your sycophants, indulging in petty vendettas, stealing from, and abusing, those whom you disliked.
Too, you tried to seek power from guards, and even, through them, to contact, and influence, others, others, even, outside the house.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter )