Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
15
522
Briefly there flashed through her mind the tarnsman from Brundisium who, apparently enamored of a free woman, had taken a different action, seizing the woman, to make her his slave, she then to be herself perhaps no more to him than a paga girl.
Briefly there flashed through her mind the tarnsman from Brundisium who, apparently enamored of a free woman, had taken a different action, seizing the woman, to make her his slave, she then to be herself perhaps no more to him than a paga girl.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 15, Sentence #522)
Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
15
519
She wondered if she might ever become like that, so grateful for the touch of a man, even if it were not she in the first place who had aroused his passions.
15
520
It was said that young men enamored of free women, perhaps having glimpsed an ankle, or a bit of throat or chin as the wind indiscreetly lifted a veil, sometimes sought out the girls in the paga taverns to lessen the pangs of love, to lessen their miseries.
15
521
Many times clutching, grateful, gasping slaves heard the names of women they did not know cried out as free men used them to climax their pleasures.
15
522
Briefly there flashed through her mind the tarnsman from Brundisium who, apparently enamored of a free woman, had taken a different action, seizing the woman, to make her his slave, she then to be herself perhaps no more to him than a paga girl.
15
523
And later she, Ellen, had even been put in the iron belt, probably as she had progressed in her lessons and had become, if only unconsciously and inadvertently, far more desirable, far more provocative, feminine, and sensuous.
15
524
She was pleased, of course, but a little frightened, to know that she had this effect on men.
15
525
But now she was alone with her master.
She wondered if she might ever become like that, so grateful for the touch of a man, even if it were not she in the first place who had aroused his passions.
It was said that young men enamored of free women, perhaps having glimpsed an ankle, or a bit of throat or chin as the wind indiscreetly lifted a veil, sometimes sought out the girls in the paga taverns to lessen the pangs of love, to lessen their miseries.
Many times clutching, grateful, gasping slaves heard the names of women they did not know cried out as free men used them to climax their pleasures.
Briefly there flashed through her mind the tarnsman from Brundisium who, apparently enamored of a free woman, had taken a different action, seizing the woman, to make her his slave, she then to be herself perhaps no more to him than a paga girl.
And later she, Ellen, had even been put in the iron belt, probably as she had progressed in her lessons and had become, if only unconsciously and inadvertently, far more desirable, far more provocative, feminine, and sensuous.
She was pleased, of course, but a little frightened, to know that she had this effect on men.
But now she was alone with her master.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 15)