Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
140
Such a collar, with its size and weight, perhaps four or five pounds, its discomfort, she was sure, in the house would have been used only as a punishment collar.
Such a collar, with its size and weight, perhaps four or five pounds, its discomfort, she was sure, in the house would have been used only as a punishment collar.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 16, Sentence #140)
Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
137
Further, it was a high collar, and it was not easy for her to put her head down.
16
138
It was exactly the same sort of collar, she was sure, as that worn by the other girls.
16
139
She could feel it, trace with her finger the closure, feel the extended ends, touch the heavy, dangling ring which had been put through the apertures and closed.
16
140
Such a collar, with its size and weight, perhaps four or five pounds, its discomfort, she was sure, in the house would have been used only as a punishment collar.
16
141
Yet, here, all the girls wore it.
16
142
But surely they were not all being punished! Could it be then that they were all merely the least of slaves, the cheapest of slaves, the lowest and the most meaningless of slaves? Doubtless such girls would all be eager to be freed of such collars, and have their throats returned to the lightness, if inflexible perfection, of a master's collar.
16
143
Could that be why the girl had called out so beggingly, so piteously, "Buy me, Master!" Where am I, she wondered.
Further, it was a high collar, and it was not easy for her to put her head down.
It was exactly the same sort of collar, she was sure, as that worn by the other girls.
She could feel it, trace with her finger the closure, feel the extended ends, touch the heavy, dangling ring which had been put through the apertures and closed.
Such a collar, with its size and weight, perhaps four or five pounds, its discomfort, she was sure, in the house would have been used only as a punishment collar.
Yet, here, all the girls wore it.
But surely they were not all being punished! Could it be then that they were all merely the least of slaves, the cheapest of slaves, the lowest and the most meaningless of slaves? Doubtless such girls would all be eager to be freed of such collars, and have their throats returned to the lightness, if inflexible perfection, of a master's collar.
Could that be why the girl had called out so beggingly, so piteously, "Buy me, Master!" Where am I, she wondered.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 16)