• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"collar "

Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)

She has been found worthy of a man's collar. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #365)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 365 She has been found worthy of a man's collar.

Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 362 She lives to love and serve.
1 363 She fears only that he may find her in some way insufficiently pleasing.
1 364 She rejoices.
1 365 She has been found worthy of a man's collar.
1 366 What a dignity, to wear a man's collar! What a badge of selection and excellence is that insignia, proving that she is lovely enough and desirable enough to be a slave! How free women, pretending to despise her, and her radiance, and happiness, envy her that distinction! The anguish, the tumult, the distress, the rage, the conflict, the jealousy, in the container, as disturbing and irritating as it might be to the male, would be largely, doubtless calculatedly, consequent upon the interactions of the two females.
1 367 Which female might be chosen, so to speak, or favored, and what would be the consequences of that choice with respect to the other female, and the male? Females, of course, compete for the attention of males, as would be biologically anticipated.
1 368 They dress for them, they concern themselves with their appearance, their posture, their speech, and behavior.
She lives to love and serve. She fears only that he may find her in some way insufficiently pleasing. She rejoices. She has been found worthy of a man's collar. What a dignity, to wear a man's collar! What a badge of selection and excellence is that insignia, proving that she is lovely enough and desirable enough to be a slave! How free women, pretending to despise her, and her radiance, and happiness, envy her that distinction! The anguish, the tumult, the distress, the rage, the conflict, the jealousy, in the container, as disturbing and irritating as it might be to the male, would be largely, doubtless calculatedly, consequent upon the interactions of the two females. Which female might be chosen, so to speak, or favored, and what would be the consequences of that choice with respect to the other female, and the male? Females, of course, compete for the attention of males, as would be biologically anticipated. They dress for them, they concern themselves with their appearance, their posture, their speech, and behavior. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1)