Book 29. (1 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
749
Some masters try to shame their slaves for what they cannot help, indeed for responses for which the master himself may have been significantly responsible, particularly if they have known them as lofty, frigid free women, now, by their will, reduced to begging animals.
Some masters try to shame their slaves for what they cannot help, indeed for responses for which the master himself may have been significantly responsible, particularly if they have known them as lofty, frigid free women, now, by their will, reduced to begging animals.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 3, Sentence #749)
Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
746
Even in the Pleasure Cylinder the slave fires had been well lit in Cecily's lovely, helpless, vulnerable little belly, and she had soon found herself, as is common with female slaves, their victim and prisoner.
3
747
How the flames of their needs goad slaves to the feet of masters, even to the feet of those they may loathe.
3
748
I did not begrudge Cecily her ecstasies, nor would I hinder them.
3
749
Some masters try to shame their slaves for what they cannot help, indeed for responses for which the master himself may have been significantly responsible, particularly if they have known them as lofty, frigid free women, now, by their will, reduced to begging animals.
3
750
That, however, seems to me cruel.
3
751
It does help the slave, of course, to see herself as a slave, in misery and shame, as she recalls her former contempt for such things in slaves.
3
752
Now she herself understands what it is to be in the throes of being mastered.
Even in the Pleasure Cylinder the slave fires had been well lit in Cecily's lovely, helpless, vulnerable little belly, and she had soon found herself, as is common with female slaves, their victim and prisoner.
How the flames of their needs goad slaves to the feet of masters, even to the feet of those they may loathe.
I did not begrudge Cecily her ecstasies, nor would I hinder them.
Some masters try to shame their slaves for what they cannot help, indeed for responses for which the master himself may have been significantly responsible, particularly if they have known them as lofty, frigid free women, now, by their will, reduced to begging animals.
That, however, seems to me cruel.
It does help the slave, of course, to see herself as a slave, in misery and shame, as she recalls her former contempt for such things in slaves.
Now she herself understands what it is to be in the throes of being mastered.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 3)