Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
9
345
"I do not understand!" she wept.
9
346
"Does the mastery not fill a man with power," I asked, "with zest, with vitality, with a sense of reality and identity, with a sense of fittingness, with a sense of being himself, with a sense at last of being a part of nature rather than a dislocated, lost, wandering fragment shorn from her?" "Why have we not been brought before Lord Nishida!" she cried.
9
347
"The mastery fulfills a man," I said.
9
348
"What man is complete until he has at his feet a slave?" "A slave! Oh, yes, a slave!" laughed Miss Wentworth, scornfully.
9
349
Then she turned to Cecily.
9
350
"slave!" she said.
9
351
"Mistress?" said Cecily.
"I do not understand!" she wept.
"Does the mastery not fill a man with power," I asked, "with zest, with vitality, with a sense of reality and identity, with a sense of fittingness, with a sense of being himself, with a sense at last of being a part of nature rather than a dislocated, lost, wandering fragment shorn from her?" "Why have we not been brought before Lord Nishida!" she cried.
"The mastery fulfills a man," I said.
"What man is complete until he has at his feet a slave?" "A slave! Oh, yes, a slave!" laughed Miss Wentworth, scornfully.
Then she turned to Cecily.
"slave!" she said.
"Mistress?" said Cecily.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter )