Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
142
She is then spoiled for freedom, is beyond it, and lives instead for the attention, love, and touch of her master.
She is then spoiled for freedom, is beyond it, and lives instead for the attention, love, and touch of her master.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 11, Sentence #142)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
139
It is often a part of their training.
11
140
It is interesting to see a slaver take a free female, complacent in her sexual inertness, even one arrogantly proud of her frigidity, and transform her into a needful, helpless, vulnerable, begging slave, zealous to serve, that she may be rewarded with even the least touch of a male.
11
141
Once the slave fires flame in the belly of a woman her freedom is behind her.
11
142
She is then spoiled for freedom, is beyond it, and lives instead for the attention, love, and touch of her master.
11
143
Indeed, it is not unusual that one who is familiar only with free women, with their reservations, suspicions, calculations, and inhibitions, their inertnesses and frigidities, is often astonished to encounter a female slave, one whose needs have now put her vulnerably, helplessly, at the mercy of men.
11
144
Sometimes a fellow encounters in an alcove a woman earlier courted in vain, now a collared slave.
11
145
It is then as though there were two women, and, in a sense, this is true, for where there was once a free woman there is now a slave.
It is often a part of their training.
It is interesting to see a slaver take a free female, complacent in her sexual inertness, even one arrogantly proud of her frigidity, and transform her into a needful, helpless, vulnerable, begging slave, zealous to serve, that she may be rewarded with even the least touch of a male.
Once the slave fires flame in the belly of a woman her freedom is behind her.
She is then spoiled for freedom, is beyond it, and lives instead for the attention, love, and touch of her master.
Indeed, it is not unusual that one who is familiar only with free women, with their reservations, suspicions, calculations, and inhibitions, their inertnesses and frigidities, is often astonished to encounter a female slave, one whose needs have now put her vulnerably, helplessly, at the mercy of men.
Sometimes a fellow encounters in an alcove a woman earlier courted in vain, now a collared slave.
It is then as though there were two women, and, in a sense, this is true, for where there was once a free woman there is now a slave.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 11)