Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
231
She had once thought of ballet, when she was quite young, before being brought in her young majority into the higher, sterner duties and understandings of the movement.
She had once thought of ballet, when she was quite young, before being brought in her young majority into the higher, sterner duties and understandings of the movement.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #231)
Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
228
She had been small, and delicate, and exquisitely, but not amply, figured.
2
229
She had been sometimes thought of as "dainty," but she hated that word, which seemed so demeaning, so minimizing.
2
230
It had suggested that she might be no more than a biological, sexual confection of sorts, a bit of fluff, of interest perhaps, but unimportant, negligible in a way, as a human being.
2
231
She had once thought of ballet, when she was quite young, before being brought in her young majority into the higher, sterner duties and understandings of the movement.
2
232
But, too, she had been, in her way, interestingly, though not buxom, or obtrusively so, a bit too excitingly figured for that.
2
233
Small as she was, and slim as she had been, there had been no doubt about, in its lovely proportions, the loveliness of her bosom, the narrowness of her waist, the delightful, flaring width of her hips, the sweetness of her thighs.
2
234
She was, as thousands, and millions of others, though perhaps a bit short, and a little slim, a normal human female, of a sort greedily selected for in countless generations of matings and prizings.
She had been small, and delicate, and exquisitely, but not amply, figured.
She had been sometimes thought of as "dainty," but she hated that word, which seemed so demeaning, so minimizing.
It had suggested that she might be no more than a biological, sexual confection of sorts, a bit of fluff, of interest perhaps, but unimportant, negligible in a way, as a human being.
She had once thought of ballet, when she was quite young, before being brought in her young majority into the higher, sterner duties and understandings of the movement.
But, too, she had been, in her way, interestingly, though not buxom, or obtrusively so, a bit too excitingly figured for that.
Small as she was, and slim as she had been, there had been no doubt about, in its lovely proportions, the loveliness of her bosom, the narrowness of her waist, the delightful, flaring width of her hips, the sweetness of her thighs.
She was, as thousands, and millions of others, though perhaps a bit short, and a little slim, a normal human female, of a sort greedily selected for in countless generations of matings and prizings.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 2)