Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
1010
She will then have her vengeance on them! She will pose, writhe, and dance as the slave she is, and knows herself now to be.
She will then have her vengeance on them! She will pose, writhe, and dance as the slave she is, and knows herself now to be.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #1010)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
1007
She has been found worthy of a collar.
1
1008
How beautiful and exciting then she must be! She looks forward to her sale.
1
1009
She hopes some of her scornful brothers and vengeful sisters might come to see her sold.
1
1010
She will then have her vengeance on them! She will pose, writhe, and dance as the slave she is, and knows herself now to be.
1
1011
Let them flee from the auction house, in rage and shame, as she is taken from the block with a fine bid.
1
1012
It is her hope, now, to find a kind, strong master, who will be strict with her, and well command her, and well fulfill her womanhood, one whom she may then, in gratitude, selflessly love and serve.
1
1013
One thing that is apparently difficult for free Goreans to understand, and perhaps for others who are free, or enjoy the semblance of freedom, is the reveling of the slave in what they conceive of as her degradation.
She has been found worthy of a collar.
How beautiful and exciting then she must be! She looks forward to her sale.
She hopes some of her scornful brothers and vengeful sisters might come to see her sold.
She will then have her vengeance on them! She will pose, writhe, and dance as the slave she is, and knows herself now to be.
Let them flee from the auction house, in rage and shame, as she is taken from the block with a fine bid.
It is her hope, now, to find a kind, strong master, who will be strict with her, and well command her, and well fulfill her womanhood, one whom she may then, in gratitude, selflessly love and serve.
One thing that is apparently difficult for free Goreans to understand, and perhaps for others who are free, or enjoy the semblance of freedom, is the reveling of the slave in what they conceive of as her degradation.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1)