Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
84
One may do much what one wants with animals, to improve them.
One may do much what one wants with animals, to improve them.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 12, Sentence #84)
Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
81
Sometimes she had lifted her head, her face white and rain-streaked, to look up at me, but I had paid her little attention, and she would soon put her head down, again.
12
82
Her figure, always of interest, had been improved, I thought, since the beginning of the voyage.
12
83
This had to do with the regimes of diet and exercise imposed upon her.
12
84
One may do much what one wants with animals, to improve them.
12
85
As her vitality and health improved she, well-collared, now a mere pleasure animal, like her sisters, would twist ever more helplessly in her bonds.
12
86
Slavery much increases the sexual appetites and needs of a female, until they can become almost unbearable.
12
87
I looked about, though with the clouds, the darkness, the rain, the spattering of hail, there was not much to see.
Sometimes she had lifted her head, her face white and rain-streaked, to look up at me, but I had paid her little attention, and she would soon put her head down, again.
Her figure, always of interest, had been improved, I thought, since the beginning of the voyage.
This had to do with the regimes of diet and exercise imposed upon her.
One may do much what one wants with animals, to improve them.
As her vitality and health improved she, well-collared, now a mere pleasure animal, like her sisters, would twist ever more helplessly in her bonds.
Slavery much increases the sexual appetites and needs of a female, until they can become almost unbearable.
I looked about, though with the clouds, the darkness, the rain, the spattering of hail, there was not much to see.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 12)