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"dance "

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

Did they not know that dancers might train, and hone their skills, for years, gaining greater and greater control over their body, adding dances to their repertoire, becoming more and more adept at this sensuous, delicious, intricate art form? To be sure, she supposed, there was a basic, biological sense in which "slave dance," or something certainly akin to it, did indeed lurk in every woman's belly. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 22, Sentence #134)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
22 134 Did they not know that dancers might train, and hone their skills, for years, gaining greater and greater control over their body, adding dances to their repertoire, becoming more and more adept at this sensuous, delicious, intricate art form? To be sure, she supposed, there was a basic, biological sense in which "slave dance," or something certainly akin to it, did indeed lurk in every woman's belly.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
22 131 Let the brand and collar be hers! How beautiful the slaves are, she thought.
22 132 See them dance before masters! Goreans believe that slave dance lurks in every woman's belly.
22 133 Ellen, however, thought that this was surely unlikely.
22 134 Did they not know that dancers might train, and hone their skills, for years, gaining greater and greater control over their body, adding dances to their repertoire, becoming more and more adept at this sensuous, delicious, intricate art form? To be sure, she supposed, there was a basic, biological sense in which "slave dance," or something certainly akin to it, did indeed lurk in every woman's belly.
22 135 Perhaps that is what the Goreans, in their typically straightforward and natural way, recognized.
22 136 Or perhaps they literally meant slave dance.
22 137 She supposed that that was possible.
Let the brand and collar be hers! How beautiful the slaves are, she thought. See them dance before masters! Goreans believe that slave dance lurks in every woman's belly. Ellen, however, thought that this was surely unlikely. Did they not know that dancers might train, and hone their skills, for years, gaining greater and greater control over their body, adding dances to their repertoire, becoming more and more adept at this sensuous, delicious, intricate art form? To be sure, she supposed, there was a basic, biological sense in which "slave dance," or something certainly akin to it, did indeed lurk in every woman's belly. Perhaps that is what the Goreans, in their typically straightforward and natural way, recognized. Or perhaps they literally meant slave dance. She supposed that that was possible. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 22)