Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
33
94
Is this not the life she has secretly dreamed of living, now put upon her, as securely as her collar, as securely as her chains? She is attentive to the master, for she fears his whip, but she is inventive, as well, for she desires to please him, and be found pleasing.
Is this not the life she has secretly dreamed of living, now put upon her, as securely as her collar, as securely as her chains? She is attentive to the master, for she fears his whip, but she is inventive, as well, for she desires to please him, and be found pleasing.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 33, Sentence #94)
Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
33
91
How helpless she will be, now the property of men, once they flame in her belly.
33
92
Once they burn, would she then trade her collar for a shallow deceit, the denial and falsification of her most profound reality, that of female, for the betrayal of nature, for the repudiation of her deepest self, for the inertnesses and tepidities of freedom? She has found herself, and is content.
33
93
How secure she is now, having found herself at last to be what she has always wanted to be, and has always been.
33
94
Is this not the life she has secretly dreamed of living, now put upon her, as securely as her collar, as securely as her chains? She is attentive to the master, for she fears his whip, but she is inventive, as well, for she desires to please him, and be found pleasing.
33
95
It gives her joy to be found pleasing.
33
96
As she learns Gorean, too, her high intelligence well serves her, for her master delights in her lyrical capacity to express herself, delights in learning of her feelings and thoughts, and delights in the joys of her intellectual companionship, though she may be chained naked at his slave ring.
33
97
In bondage, many such women learn their beauty, their sex, their nature, their meaning, and their identity.
How helpless she will be, now the property of men, once they flame in her belly.
Once they burn, would she then trade her collar for a shallow deceit, the denial and falsification of her most profound reality, that of female, for the betrayal of nature, for the repudiation of her deepest self, for the inertnesses and tepidities of freedom? She has found herself, and is content.
How secure she is now, having found herself at last to be what she has always wanted to be, and has always been.
Is this not the life she has secretly dreamed of living, now put upon her, as securely as her collar, as securely as her chains? She is attentive to the master, for she fears his whip, but she is inventive, as well, for she desires to please him, and be found pleasing.
It gives her joy to be found pleasing.
As she learns Gorean, too, her high intelligence well serves her, for her master delights in her lyrical capacity to express herself, delights in learning of her feelings and thoughts, and delights in the joys of her intellectual companionship, though she may be chained naked at his slave ring.
In bondage, many such women learn their beauty, their sex, their nature, their meaning, and their identity.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 33)