Book 29. (1 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
26
140
As a free woman she could not be touched, given the codes, but it was as though steaming, juicy, roasted meat had been put before a starving larl, one forbidden to so much as touch his tongue to its heat, to its temptation.
As a free woman she could not be touched, given the codes, but it was as though steaming, juicy, roasted meat had been put before a starving larl, one forbidden to so much as touch his tongue to its heat, to its temptation.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 26, Sentence #140)
Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
26
137
"She is not for sale," I said.
26
138
Had not Cecily and I been fitted to one another, selected for one another, matched to one another, by the shrewd wisdom or insidious machinations of calculating Priest-Kings, to serve their purposes, not ours, to be mutually irresistible? She had been selected to bring about my downfall, to so tempt me that my honor might be not only jeopardized but irremediably lost.
26
139
As a free woman she had been placed with me in a containment capsule on the Prison Moon, in such a proximity and under such circumstances that no man might indefinitely resist the toils of nature in which men and women, helpless captives, had been enmeshed even before small hominids had grown wicked enough and bold enough to challenge larger beasts for defensible lairs.
26
140
As a free woman she could not be touched, given the codes, but it was as though steaming, juicy, roasted meat had been put before a starving larl, one forbidden to so much as touch his tongue to its heat, to its temptation.
26
141
But Kurii had intervened.
26
142
Later, appropriately collared, nicely become slave, a fate perfect for her, and one richly deserved, she became mine.
26
143
No longer did scruples and codes, of whatever world, divide us.
"She is not for sale," I said.
Had not Cecily and I been fitted to one another, selected for one another, matched to one another, by the shrewd wisdom or insidious machinations of calculating Priest-Kings, to serve their purposes, not ours, to be mutually irresistible? She had been selected to bring about my downfall, to so tempt me that my honor might be not only jeopardized but irremediably lost.
As a free woman she had been placed with me in a containment capsule on the Prison Moon, in such a proximity and under such circumstances that no man might indefinitely resist the toils of nature in which men and women, helpless captives, had been enmeshed even before small hominids had grown wicked enough and bold enough to challenge larger beasts for defensible lairs.
As a free woman she could not be touched, given the codes, but it was as though steaming, juicy, roasted meat had been put before a starving larl, one forbidden to so much as touch his tongue to its heat, to its temptation.
But Kurii had intervened.
Later, appropriately collared, nicely become slave, a fate perfect for her, and one richly deserved, she became mine.
No longer did scruples and codes, of whatever world, divide us.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 26)