• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"appeal "

Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)

Such things appeal well to natural glories, their sense of power and pleasure. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 15, Sentence #44)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
15 44 Such things appeal well to natural glories, their sense of power and pleasure.

Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
15 41 Masters are lustful, appraising brutes, and slaves must hope to be found pleasing.
15 42 Too, she did not doubt but what men enjoyed seeing a woman's hands braceleted behind her.
15 43 This bespoke the woman's helplessness, and how at their mercy she was.
15 44 Such things appeal well to natural glories, their sense of power and pleasure.
15 45 And it would be superficial, of course, to overlook the effect of such impediments upon the woman herself, how they, like lipstick or eye shadow, accentuate the dichotomies of nature, call attention to the disparities of a radical sexual dimorphism, and deliciously enforce upon her an almost overwhelmingly welcome sense of her own sex, its desirability, beauty and weakness.
15 46 It is little wonder that women welcome bonds on their body, collars, tunics, camisks, and such.
15 47 In them they feel most man's, and thus most woman.
Masters are lustful, appraising brutes, and slaves must hope to be found pleasing. Too, she did not doubt but what men enjoyed seeing a woman's hands braceleted behind her. This bespoke the woman's helplessness, and how at their mercy she was. Such things appeal well to natural glories, their sense of power and pleasure. And it would be superficial, of course, to overlook the effect of such impediments upon the woman herself, how they, like lipstick or eye shadow, accentuate the dichotomies of nature, call attention to the disparities of a radical sexual dimorphism, and deliciously enforce upon her an almost overwhelmingly welcome sense of her own sex, its desirability, beauty and weakness. It is little wonder that women welcome bonds on their body, collars, tunics, camisks, and such. In them they feel most man's, and thus most woman. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 15)