• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"duties "

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

On her rare dates she would remain aloof and remind her companions, when necessary, in quite clear terms, to their chagrin, of her dignities and their correspondent duties. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #626)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 626 On her rare dates she would remain aloof and remind her companions, when necessary, in quite clear terms, to their chagrin, of her dignities and their correspondent duties.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 623 She was an individual, then, of staid culture, tedious civility, tiresome refinement, and an insufferable, snobbish gentility.
1 624 She refused the attentions of men, or boys, when they were offered, unless they were of an acceptable, suitable background and class.
1 625 One must be careful about such things.
1 626 On her rare dates she would remain aloof and remind her companions, when necessary, in quite clear terms, to their chagrin, of her dignities and their correspondent duties.
1 627 Sometimes, however, she wondered what it would be to be in their arms.
1 628 But such thoughts were soon thrust away, indignantly, or almost indignantly.
1 629 She was quite pleased with her social station and irritatingly vain concerning what she took to be, mistakenly, as it turned out, the excellence of her breeding.
She was an individual, then, of staid culture, tedious civility, tiresome refinement, and an insufferable, snobbish gentility. She refused the attentions of men, or boys, when they were offered, unless they were of an acceptable, suitable background and class. One must be careful about such things. On her rare dates she would remain aloof and remind her companions, when necessary, in quite clear terms, to their chagrin, of her dignities and their correspondent duties. Sometimes, however, she wondered what it would be to be in their arms. But such thoughts were soon thrust away, indignantly, or almost indignantly. She was quite pleased with her social station and irritatingly vain concerning what she took to be, mistakenly, as it turned out, the excellence of her breeding. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1)