Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
25
684
What do they do? How do they serve their masters? What goes on behind those closed doors? What is it like to have to obey? What is it like to be in a collar? When the freewomen are alone with one another, and no young free females are present, they speak of little else.
What do they do? How do they serve their masters? What goes on behind those closed doors? What is it like to have to obey? What is it like to be in a collar? When the free women are alone with one another, and no young free females are present, they speak of little else.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 25, Sentence #684)
Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
25
681
You are priceless, and free.
25
682
They are only meaningless slaves, only domestic animals".
25
683
Despite their profession of disinterest in such matters, freewomen, it seems clear, seek avidly to learn all they can about female slaves and their lives.
25
684
What do they do? How do they serve their masters? What goes on behind those closed doors? What is it like to have to obey? What is it like to be in a collar? When the freewomen are alone with one another, and no young free females are present, they speak of little else.
25
685
It seems they are obsessed with their embonded sisters.
25
686
If they are truly free, why is it that they find the topic of the slave girl so extraordinarily fascinating? Doubtless it would be presumptuous for Ellen, who is only a slave, to speculate on such matters.
25
687
She will, however, note in passing, that this antipathy and fascination is not limited to Gorean freewomen.
You are priceless, and free.
They are only meaningless slaves, only domestic animals".
Despite their profession of disinterest in such matters, free women, it seems clear, seek avidly to learn all they can about female slaves and their lives.
What do they do? How do they serve their masters? What goes on behind those closed doors? What is it like to have to obey? What is it like to be in a collar? When the free women are alone with one another, and no young free females are present, they speak of little else.
It seems they are obsessed with their embonded sisters.
If they are truly free, why is it that they find the topic of the slave girl so extraordinarily fascinating? Doubtless it would be presumptuous for Ellen, who is only a slave, to speculate on such matters.
She will, however, note in passing, that this antipathy and fascination is not limited to Gorean free women.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 25)