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"slave " "wine "

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

Whereas, as suggested earlier, the effects of slave wine and "the wine of the noble free woman" are identical, the common ingredient being sip root, there is a considerable difference in the two drinks. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 11, Sentence #196)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
11 196 Whereas, as suggested earlier, the effects of slave wine and "the wine of the noble free woman" are identical, the common ingredient being sip root, there is a considerable difference in the two drinks.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
11 193 Your hair was very beautiful, as well you knew, in your vanity, and it would have been a sorry thing for it to have been fouled in the ordure of tharlarion".
11 194 "I protested my work, and as they would have me attend to it," she said, "and my face was forced down, into the dung of tharlarion.
11 195 I protested no more".
11 196 Whereas, as suggested earlier, the effects of slave wine and "the wine of the noble free woman" are identical, the common ingredient being sip root, there is a considerable difference in the two drinks.
11 197 slave wine makes no attempt to conceal the bitterness of ground, raw sip root, whereas "the wine of the noble free woman" is flavored, spiced, and sweetened in such a way that it offers no offense to the delicate and more refined sensibility of the free woman.
11 198 A slave, of course, as any domestic animal, is to be bred only if and when, and how, the master wishes.
11 199 A releaser, interestingly, deliciously palatable, is administered to the slave prior to her mating.
Your hair was very beautiful, as well you knew, in your vanity, and it would have been a sorry thing for it to have been fouled in the ordure of tharlarion". "I protested my work, and as they would have me attend to it," she said, "and my face was forced down, into the dung of tharlarion. I protested no more". Whereas, as suggested earlier, the effects of slave wine and "the wine of the noble free woman" are identical, the common ingredient being sip root, there is a considerable difference in the two drinks. slave wine makes no attempt to conceal the bitterness of ground, raw sip root, whereas "the wine of the noble free woman" is flavored, spiced, and sweetened in such a way that it offers no offense to the delicate and more refined sensibility of the free woman. A slave, of course, as any domestic animal, is to be bred only if and when, and how, the master wishes. A releaser, interestingly, deliciously palatable, is administered to the slave prior to her mating. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 11)