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"pirate "

Book 29. (1 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Individual Quote)

Had she not been so, in one way or another, in her dreams, on the smooth, scarlet tiles of a conqueror's palace, on the deep-piled rug within the tent of a desert chieftain, on the deck of a pirate's vessel? In a pathological culture, of course, many things are kept concealed, often those which are most illuminating and meaningful, most important. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #280)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 280 Had she not been so, in one way or another, in her dreams, on the smooth, scarlet tiles of a conqueror's palace, on the deep-piled rug within the tent of a desert chieftain, on the deck of a pirate's vessel? In a pathological culture, of course, many things are kept concealed, often those which are most illuminating and meaningful, most important.

Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 277 In her extremity, her elections of certain utterances were, of course, not to be unexpected in a female.
1 278 They are common in the history of worlds.
1 279 What have they to bargain with, save their beauty? And will it be enough? Is it sufficient? Is it enough that they will be spared, to be brought, perhaps rather sooner than later, to the sales block? But such a cry was to be expected, not only in any woman at the feet of males, but particularly from one such as she, who, in a thousand ways, I discerned, sensed the fittingness of her position, her prostration.
1 280 Had she not been so, in one way or another, in her dreams, on the smooth, scarlet tiles of a conqueror's palace, on the deep-piled rug within the tent of a desert chieftain, on the deck of a pirate's vessel? In a pathological culture, of course, many things are kept concealed, often those which are most illuminating and meaningful, most important.
1 281 She had shortly thereafter explicitly proposed herself as a slave, indeed had pathetically begged bondage.
1 282 Indeed, a moment later, she had clearly, explicitly, pronounced herself slave.
1 283 These words, "I am a slave," were cried out in full consciousness.
In her extremity, her elections of certain utterances were, of course, not to be unexpected in a female. They are common in the history of worlds. What have they to bargain with, save their beauty? And will it be enough? Is it sufficient? Is it enough that they will be spared, to be brought, perhaps rather sooner than later, to the sales block? But such a cry was to be expected, not only in any woman at the feet of males, but particularly from one such as she, who, in a thousand ways, I discerned, sensed the fittingness of her position, her prostration. Had she not been so, in one way or another, in her dreams, on the smooth, scarlet tiles of a conqueror's palace, on the deep-piled rug within the tent of a desert chieftain, on the deck of a pirate's vessel? In a pathological culture, of course, many things are kept concealed, often those which are most illuminating and meaningful, most important. She had shortly thereafter explicitly proposed herself as a slave, indeed had pathetically begged bondage. Indeed, a moment later, she had clearly, explicitly, pronounced herself slave. These words, "I am a slave," were cried out in full consciousness. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 1)