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

Portus Canio, and his fellows, Fel Doron and Loquatus, had seemed to take little interest, little more than if someone had put someone else's small, silken she-sleen through her paces. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 27, Sentence #2412)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
27 2412 Portus Canio, and his fellows, Fel Doron and Loquatus, had seemed to take little interest, little more than if someone had put someone else's small, silken she-sleen through her paces.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
27 2409 Tersius Major had not been permitted to so much as touch her.
27 2410 The officer, too, had refrained from her use.
27 2411 Once she had looked to the bound prisoners.
27 2412 Portus Canio, and his fellows, Fel Doron and Loquatus, had seemed to take little interest, little more than if someone had put someone else's small, silken she-sleen through her paces.
27 2413 The wounded man who was with the company of Mirus lay bound, weak, miserable, unnoticed, on the grass.
27 2414 The sleenmaster, he of the party of Mirus, eyes glistening, had eagerly, keenly, excitedly, scarcely capable of controlling himself, witnessed the successive ravishings of the slave.
27 2415 Ellen wondered if he were new to Gor.
Tersius Major had not been permitted to so much as touch her. The officer, too, had refrained from her use. Once she had looked to the bound prisoners. Portus Canio, and his fellows, Fel Doron and Loquatus, had seemed to take little interest, little more than if someone had put someone else's small, silken she-sleen through her paces. The wounded man who was with the company of Mirus lay bound, weak, miserable, unnoticed, on the grass. The sleenmaster, he of the party of Mirus, eyes glistening, had eagerly, keenly, excitedly, scarcely capable of controlling himself, witnessed the successive ravishings of the slave. Ellen wondered if he were new to Gor. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 27)