Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
21
332
Can she endure this shame, this humiliation, this uncertainty, being the one who does not know, while others look upon her, and perhaps remember, and know? Is not a paga girl, in an alcove, serving her master of the ahn, more fortunate? She is likely to be well aware of who it is who is putting her to use.
Can she endure this shame, this humiliation, this uncertainty, being the one who does not know, while others look upon her, and perhaps remember, and know? Is not a paga girl, in an alcove, serving her master of the Ahn, more fortunate? She is likely to be well aware of who it is who is putting her to use.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 21, Sentence #332)
Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
21
329
Can she live with this? Is that fellow smiling? What is the meaning of that look, by another, or does it have a meaning? When any fellow's eyes are upon her she seizes her veils and holds them more closely about her face.
21
330
Do other free women suspect how she is now different from them? Could they possibly know? That she, though a free woman, has been subjected to slave use? How they would shun and scorn her, if they knew.
21
331
Whose pleasure has she served? That of several, as might have a slave, but she knows not one of them.
21
332
Can she endure this shame, this humiliation, this uncertainty, being the one who does not know, while others look upon her, and perhaps remember, and know? Is not a paga girl, in an alcove, serving her master of the ahn, more fortunate? She is likely to be well aware of who it is who is putting her to use.
21
333
Too, the fellow is likely to want the slave to be well aware of who it is who is seeing to it that she endures the lengthy and unspeakable raptures of her bondage.
21
334
It is he whom she, helpless, clutching him, must beg for more.
21
335
And, too, the free woman, to her chagrin, can recall the incipient feelings in her body, and her gasping, and how her small arms touched, and then held, and then clutched, gratefully, the body in whose power she lay.
Can she live with this? Is that fellow smiling? What is the meaning of that look, by another, or does it have a meaning? When any fellow's eyes are upon her she seizes her veils and holds them more closely about her face.
Do other free women suspect how she is now different from them? Could they possibly know? That she, though a free woman, has been subjected to slave use? How they would shun and scorn her, if they knew.
Whose pleasure has she served? That of several, as might have a slave, but she knows not one of them.
Can she endure this shame, this humiliation, this uncertainty, being the one who does not know, while others look upon her, and perhaps remember, and know? Is not a paga girl, in an alcove, serving her master of the ahn, more fortunate? She is likely to be well aware of who it is who is putting her to use.
Too, the fellow is likely to want the slave to be well aware of who it is who is seeing to it that she endures the lengthy and unspeakable raptures of her bondage.
It is he whom she, helpless, clutching him, must beg for more.
And, too, the free woman, to her chagrin, can recall the incipient feelings in her body, and her gasping, and how her small arms touched, and then held, and then clutched, gratefully, the body in whose power she lay.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 21)