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"guilty "

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

Commonly the women are innocent, guilty only of their unusual attractiveness, which will bring them to the slave block. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 22, Sentence #17)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
22 17 Commonly the women are innocent, guilty only of their unusual attractiveness, which will bring them to the slave block.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
22 14 Tassa powder is a harmless, tasteless, swift-acting drug.
22 15 It is commonly used in the taking of women.
22 16 It might be introduced into the parties of maidens, into the private, candle-lit suppers of high-born beauties, into the beverages of inns or vendors.
22 17 Commonly the women are innocent, guilty only of their unusual attractiveness, which will bring them to the slave block.
22 18 To be sure, a woman might be less innocent, and might partake of, say, wine, with a stranger, one on whom she hopes to employ her wiles to her profit, one from whom she might hope to win some favor or advantage; perhaps she regales him with some contrived tale of hardship or woe, designed to elicit coins; perhaps she merely delights in tormenting a fellow, teasing and taunting him, leading him on to dazzling expectations and hopes which she has no intention of satisfying.
22 19 She exercises her presumed beauty, seductive and mysterious within her robes and veils, to gratify her vanity, or even her dislike of males, such oafish, vile brutes.
22 20 There are many ways, obviously, in which a woman can torture a male.
Tassa powder is a harmless, tasteless, swift-acting drug. It is commonly used in the taking of women. It might be introduced into the parties of maidens, into the private, candle-lit suppers of high-born beauties, into the beverages of inns or vendors. Commonly the women are innocent, guilty only of their unusual attractiveness, which will bring them to the slave block. To be sure, a woman might be less innocent, and might partake of, say, wine, with a stranger, one on whom she hopes to employ her wiles to her profit, one from whom she might hope to win some favor or advantage; perhaps she regales him with some contrived tale of hardship or woe, designed to elicit coins; perhaps she merely delights in tormenting a fellow, teasing and taunting him, leading him on to dazzling expectations and hopes which she has no intention of satisfying. She exercises her presumed beauty, seductive and mysterious within her robes and veils, to gratify her vanity, or even her dislike of males, such oafish, vile brutes. There are many ways, obviously, in which a woman can torture a male. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 22)