• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"paga "

Book 32. (1 results) Smugglers of Gor (Individual Quote)

It is one thing, of course, to engage in such games in a theater, a street, or plaza, and quite another on a ship at sea, far from taverns, the relief of paga girls, and such. - (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #50)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 50 It is one thing, of course, to engage in such games in a theater, a street, or plaza, and quite another on a ship at sea, far from taverns, the relief of paga girls, and such.

Book 32. (7 results) Smugglers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 47 Such are to be respected, but, in time, men grow hungry.
10 48 It is a strain, even on a well-trained sleen, to circle meat it is forbidden to touch.
10 49 The matter worsens, of course, if the free woman insists on the privileges of the deck, or, say, if she is careless of how she stands when the wind whips her robes, and matters may become intolerable indeed should she delight herself with certain pleasures not unknown to occasionally appertain to her sex, usually harmlessly, flirting with, or teasing, taunting, and tormenting men, confident in the inviolability of her freedom, perhaps in the possession of a shared Home Stone, and such.
10 50 It is one thing, of course, to engage in such games in a theater, a street, or plaza, and quite another on a ship at sea, far from taverns, the relief of paga girls, and such.
10 51 More than one woman began a voyage free and concluded it being sold in a distant port.
10 52 Sometimes a round ship will carry slaves for the men, ship slaves.
10 53 These are at the pleasure of the crew.
Such are to be respected, but, in time, men grow hungry. It is a strain, even on a well-trained sleen, to circle meat it is forbidden to touch. The matter worsens, of course, if the free woman insists on the privileges of the deck, or, say, if she is careless of how she stands when the wind whips her robes, and matters may become intolerable indeed should she delight herself with certain pleasures not unknown to occasionally appertain to her sex, usually harmlessly, flirting with, or teasing, taunting, and tormenting men, confident in the inviolability of her freedom, perhaps in the possession of a shared Home Stone, and such. It is one thing, of course, to engage in such games in a theater, a street, or plaza, and quite another on a ship at sea, far from taverns, the relief of paga girls, and such. More than one woman began a voyage free and concluded it being sold in a distant port. Sometimes a round ship will carry slaves for the men, ship slaves. These are at the pleasure of the crew. - (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 10)