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"honor "

Book 31. (1 results) Conspirators of Gor (Individual Quote)

Did they not realize my quality, the honor I paid to them, how fortunate they were, that I would permit them to share my company, however briefly? Surely there were many who would have rejoiced to be granted such an opportunity. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 7, Sentence #578)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
7 578 Did they not realize my quality, the honor I paid to them, how fortunate they were, that I would permit them to share my company, however briefly? Surely there were many who would have rejoiced to be granted such an opportunity.

Book 31. (7 results) Conspirators of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
7 575 A week would not pass without my declining several offers for outings, afternoons or evenings, with such, while I would select from amongst such offers those few which I deemed suitable, those which might prove eventually to be to my advantage, those from suitably positioned young men, young men worth interesting and cultivating, young men whose background and assets exceeded my own.
7 576 Oddly, though I had pretended to be interested in them, laughed at their jokes, and such, I had seldom received a second invitation from them.
7 577 I did not understand this.
7 578 Did they not realize my quality, the honor I paid to them, how fortunate they were, that I would permit them to share my company, however briefly? Surely there were many who would have rejoiced to be granted such an opportunity.
7 579 How ungrateful, how foolish, how stupid they were! "Keep those knees split, slave," said one of the instructresses.
7 580 "Yes, Mistress," I whispered.
7 581 "Wider," snapped another.
A week would not pass without my declining several offers for outings, afternoons or evenings, with such, while I would select from amongst such offers those few which I deemed suitable, those which might prove eventually to be to my advantage, those from suitably positioned young men, young men worth interesting and cultivating, young men whose background and assets exceeded my own. Oddly, though I had pretended to be interested in them, laughed at their jokes, and such, I had seldom received a second invitation from them. I did not understand this. Did they not realize my quality, the honor I paid to them, how fortunate they were, that I would permit them to share my company, however briefly? Surely there were many who would have rejoiced to be granted such an opportunity. How ungrateful, how foolish, how stupid they were! "Keep those knees split, slave," said one of the instructresses. "Yes, Mistress," I whispered. "Wider," snapped another. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 7)