Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
465
Second, this is not done with free women, of course, but only with slaves, as they are mere beasts, domestic animals, and it much improves them.
Second, this is not done with free women, of course, but only with slaves, as they are mere beasts, domestic animals, and it much improves them.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #465)
Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
462
Those, of course, would be slave fires.
1
463
Perhaps it seems cruel to light such fires in a woman's belly, which will eventually make her their helpless prisoner, but it is not.
1
464
First, how can a woman be a true woman whose belly is not periodically, irresistibly, needfully, helplessly aflame, begging for a man's touch.
1
465
Second, this is not done with free women, of course, but only with slaves, as they are mere beasts, domestic animals, and it much improves them.
1
466
Who would want a slave in whose belly slave fires did not burn? Such are the stoutest of chains.
1
467
"I do not know what we may hear," said a man.
1
468
"True," said another.
Those, of course, would be slave fires.
Perhaps it seems cruel to light such fires in a woman's belly, which will eventually make her their helpless prisoner, but it is not.
First, how can a woman be a true woman whose belly is not periodically, irresistibly, needfully, helplessly aflame, begging for a man's touch.
Second, this is not done with free women, of course, but only with slaves, as they are mere beasts, domestic animals, and it much improves them.
Who would want a slave in whose belly slave fires did not burn? Such are the stoutest of chains.
"I do not know what we may hear," said a man.
"True," said another.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 1)