Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
50
They, too, suitably mastered, as women may be, soon learned themselves, and love.
They, too, suitably mastered, as women may be, soon learned themselves, and love.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #50)
Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
47
What hope had they for safety, understanding, and compassion, and happiness, save from males who would relish their beauty and master it, uncompromisingly, putting it to the purposes for which the slaves knew it had been formed by nature.
10
48
To be sure, I had seen such gross slaves occasionally taken in hand by a man, to whom, and before whom, they were as small, weak, and helpless as the lovelier slaves had been to them, and before them.
10
49
Such gross women, sold perhaps for a pittance, and taught the meaning of their sex, if only by the whip, discovered the femininity they had thought nonexistent, and had professed to despise in their smaller sisters.
10
50
They, too, suitably mastered, as women may be, soon learned themselves, and love.
10
51
One need not be a gold-piece girl or a silver-piece girl to be fulfilled in bondage.
10
52
Now they know themselves, and gratefully, and humbly, as mastered females, as only another sister in bondage.
10
53
I thought of Jad, her opulent streets, of the countryside, of the terraces of Cos, of her grapes, fresh, sweet, and full, of Ar, of glorious, imperial Ar, with its countless towers and its wide boulevards, of the occupation, of my squad, of the rising in the city, the flight to return, the welcome we did not receive, the poverty, the casting about, of Telnus, her taverns, her harbor, and shipping, of the Metioche, and of the great ship of Tersites.
What hope had they for safety, understanding, and compassion, and happiness, save from males who would relish their beauty and master it, uncompromisingly, putting it to the purposes for which the slaves knew it had been formed by nature.
To be sure, I had seen such gross slaves occasionally taken in hand by a man, to whom, and before whom, they were as small, weak, and helpless as the lovelier slaves had been to them, and before them.
Such gross women, sold perhaps for a pittance, and taught the meaning of their sex, if only by the whip, discovered the femininity they had thought nonexistent, and had professed to despise in their smaller sisters.
They, too, suitably mastered, as women may be, soon learned themselves, and love.
One need not be a gold-piece girl or a silver-piece girl to be fulfilled in bondage.
Now they know themselves, and gratefully, and humbly, as mastered females, as only another sister in bondage.
I thought of Jad, her opulent streets, of the countryside, of the terraces of Cos, of her grapes, fresh, sweet, and full, of Ar, of glorious, imperial Ar, with its countless towers and its wide boulevards, of the occupation, of my squad, of the rising in the city, the flight to return, the welcome we did not receive, the poverty, the casting about, of Telnus, her taverns, her harbor, and shipping, of the Metioche, and of the great ship of Tersites.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 10)