Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
201
Surely that would be more prestigious than picking up someone like you or me, who are merely domestic animals, livestock.
Surely that would be more prestigious than picking up someone like you or me, who are merely domestic animals, livestock.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 13, Sentence #201)
Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
13
198
"It is a pleasure for a tarnsman to have his tarn seize in its talons a woman and carry her off, or he may prefer the use of a slave net or a capture loop.
13
199
She later then, in a safe place, may be suitably secured, say, stripped and roped, and put across his saddle, or simply chained naked to a saddle ring.
13
200
The ideal, of course, is to catch a free woman, for such is the most prestigious game.
13
201
Surely that would be more prestigious than picking up someone like you or me, who are merely domestic animals, livestock.
13
202
Some claim that that is the reason that free women are so cumbersomely and concealingly garbed, and that slaves are so lightly and revealingly clad.
13
203
Supposedly the tarnsman might thus be lured to the pursuit of an identifiably delightful quarry, something obviously worth owning, as opposed to a free woman who might, when stripped, prove to be as ugly as a tharlarion".
13
204
Tharlarion, Ellen had been told, were reptilian creatures, some of which were allegedly quite large, and domesticated.
"It is a pleasure for a tarnsman to have his tarn seize in its talons a woman and carry her off, or he may prefer the use of a slave net or a capture loop.
She later then, in a safe place, may be suitably secured, say, stripped and roped, and put across his saddle, or simply chained naked to a saddle ring.
The ideal, of course, is to catch a free woman, for such is the most prestigious game.
Surely that would be more prestigious than picking up someone like you or me, who are merely domestic animals, livestock.
Some claim that that is the reason that free women are so cumbersomely and concealingly garbed, and that slaves are so lightly and revealingly clad.
Supposedly the tarnsman might thus be lured to the pursuit of an identifiably delightful quarry, something obviously worth owning, as opposed to a free woman who might, when stripped, prove to be as ugly as a tharlarion".
Tharlarion, Ellen had been told, were reptilian creatures, some of which were allegedly quite large, and domesticated.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 13)