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

You put me in chains, and in them I have found the greatest freedom and happiness a woman can know! Oh, I know my vulnerability, and I fear the bonds of a slave, but I would not have things other than as they are! Oh, I fear the whip, but I would not be other than subject to it! So see me dance, Master! See me dance, one you once reduced to bondage, now only another slave, now only another slave before free men! Ellen had then, in her dance, a sense of her power over men. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 24, Sentence #620)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
24 620 You put me in chains, and in them I have found the greatest freedom and happiness a woman can know! Oh, I know my vulnerability, and I fear the bonds of a slave, but I would not have things other than as they are! Oh, I fear the whip, but I would not be other than subject to it! So see me dance, Master! See me dance, one you once reduced to bondage, now only another slave, now only another slave before free men! Ellen had then, in her dance, a sense of her power over men.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
24 617 I think you do want me, in spite of what you pretend.
24 618 How long have you been there? Well, then, see your Ellen! Despise me if you will.
24 619 I do not care! See her dance, as the slave she is! You sought to destroy her, to reduce and ruin her, but you have succeeded only in giving her the dearest, the most precious and greatest fulfillment a woman can know! I love being what I am, being joyfully, willingly, helplessly, given over wholly to love and service.
24 620 You put me in chains, and in them I have found the greatest freedom and happiness a woman can know! Oh, I know my vulnerability, and I fear the bonds of a slave, but I would not have things other than as they are! Oh, I fear the whip, but I would not be other than subject to it! So see me dance, Master! See me dance, one you once reduced to bondage, now only another slave, now only another slave before free men! Ellen had then, in her dance, a sense of her power over men.
24 621 She saw interest, their fevered wildness, their blazing eyes, their clenched fists, heard their applause, their cries of pleasure.
24 622 You, Masters, she thought, have the power of strength, and dominance, and weapons, but I, a mere slave, and my lowly sisters, have power as well, the power of our desirability, the power of our beauty! And our power is not inconsiderable, I assure you! Who is strongest, I wonder, she asked herself.
24 623 Then suddenly it seemed she knew who was strongest for, to her astonishment, she now saw, toward the back of the silk, only a few feet from Mirus, to his left, Selius Arconious! He, though impecunious, though a simple workman, no more than an ordinary tarnster, was a Gorean master.
I think you do want me, in spite of what you pretend. How long have you been there? Well, then, see your Ellen! Despise me if you will. I do not care! See her dance, as the slave she is! You sought to destroy her, to reduce and ruin her, but you have succeeded only in giving her the dearest, the most precious and greatest fulfillment a woman can know! I love being what I am, being joyfully, willingly, helplessly, given over wholly to love and service. You put me in chains, and in them I have found the greatest freedom and happiness a woman can know! Oh, I know my vulnerability, and I fear the bonds of a slave, but I would not have things other than as they are! Oh, I fear the whip, but I would not be other than subject to it! So see me dance, Master! See me dance, one you once reduced to bondage, now only another slave, now only another slave before free men! Ellen had then, in her dance, a sense of her power over men. She saw interest, their fevered wildness, their blazing eyes, their clenched fists, heard their applause, their cries of pleasure. You, Masters, she thought, have the power of strength, and dominance, and weapons, but I, a mere slave, and my lowly sisters, have power as well, the power of our desirability, the power of our beauty! And our power is not inconsiderable, I assure you! Who is strongest, I wonder, she asked herself. Then suddenly it seemed she knew who was strongest for, to her astonishment, she now saw, toward the back of the silk, only a few feet from Mirus, to his left, Selius Arconious! He, though impecunious, though a simple workman, no more than an ordinary tarnster, was a Gorean master. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 24)