Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
389
She would be exactly the sort of woman he would relentlessly bid upon to bring into his collar, and he would be exactly the sort of man into whose collar she would long to be locked.
She would be exactly the sort of woman he would relentlessly bid upon to bring into his collar, and he would be exactly the sort of man into whose collar she would long to be locked.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #389)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
386
The girl from the Steel Worlds, and the girl from England, as indicated, had not been selected at random.
1
387
In particular, however, we should note that the English girl had been selected by her captors, the Priest-Kings, with particularly great care, and with all the expertise and wisdom of their advanced science, to be a match with the male in question.
1
388
Each would be intensely, irresistibly attractive and desirable to the other.
1
389
She would be exactly the sort of woman he would relentlessly bid upon to bring into his collar, and he would be exactly the sort of man into whose collar she would long to be locked.
1
390
This matching, of course, was scarcely accidental, or gratuitous.
1
391
It had its role to play in what would prove to be an interesting and remarkable, if duplicitous and guileful, gambit of Priest-Kings.
1
392
Each would seem to be a gift to the other, in the most profound modalities of male/female relations, but a gift, as it turned out, which had its ulterior purposes, one intended to further the designs of Priest-Kings.
The girl from the Steel Worlds, and the girl from England, as indicated, had not been selected at random.
In particular, however, we should note that the English girl had been selected by her captors, the Priest-Kings, with particularly great care, and with all the expertise and wisdom of their advanced science, to be a match with the male in question.
Each would be intensely, irresistibly attractive and desirable to the other.
She would be exactly the sort of woman he would relentlessly bid upon to bring into his collar, and he would be exactly the sort of man into whose collar she would long to be locked.
This matching, of course, was scarcely accidental, or gratuitous.
It had its role to play in what would prove to be an interesting and remarkable, if duplicitous and guileful, gambit of Priest-Kings.
Each would seem to be a gift to the other, in the most profound modalities of male/female relations, but a gift, as it turned out, which had its ulterior purposes, one intended to further the designs of Priest-Kings.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1)