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"games "

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

I had little doubt but what she would use every trick, every subtlety and wile, every cleverness, every asset of beauty and wit available to her, to reduce him again to the pathetic level of a typical male of Earth, something at her disposal, and that he would be muchly challenged to resist such artifices, and bring her to his feet, she then fully apprised, to her relief, that such games were over, and she was truly slave. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 15, Sentence #217)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
15 217 I had little doubt but what she would use every trick, every subtlety and wile, every cleverness, every asset of beauty and wit available to her, to reduce him again to the pathetic level of a typical male of Earth, something at her disposal, and that he would be muchly challenged to resist such artifices, and bring her to his feet, she then fully apprised, to her relief, that such games were over, and she was truly slave.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
15 214 His task and challenge, of course, difficult as it might be, would be to make certain she was kept as a full and perfect slave, despite their previous lives and background.
15 215 Only in this way could they both achieve their very different human perfections.
15 216 Men and women are not the same.
15 217 I had little doubt but what she would use every trick, every subtlety and wile, every cleverness, every asset of beauty and wit available to her, to reduce him again to the pathetic level of a typical male of Earth, something at her disposal, and that he would be muchly challenged to resist such artifices, and bring her to his feet, she then fully apprised, to her relief, that such games were over, and she was truly slave.
15 218 "You are fortunate I am not of the Pani," I said.
15 219 "To refuse such a gift might injure one's pride, and would certainly generate bad blood.
15 220 It might even be taken as an insult, that you found the gift beneath you, or unworthy of you.
His task and challenge, of course, difficult as it might be, would be to make certain she was kept as a full and perfect slave, despite their previous lives and background. Only in this way could they both achieve their very different human perfections. Men and women are not the same. I had little doubt but what she would use every trick, every subtlety and wile, every cleverness, every asset of beauty and wit available to her, to reduce him again to the pathetic level of a typical male of Earth, something at her disposal, and that he would be muchly challenged to resist such artifices, and bring her to his feet, she then fully apprised, to her relief, that such games were over, and she was truly slave. "You are fortunate I am not of the Pani," I said. "To refuse such a gift might injure one's pride, and would certainly generate bad blood. It might even be taken as an insult, that you found the gift beneath you, or unworthy of you. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 15)