Book 32. (1 results) Smugglers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
15
It is useful as a discipline, and, surely, it reminds us that we are slaves.
It is useful as a discipline, and, surely, it reminds us that we are slaves.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 11, Sentence #15)
Book 32. (7 results) Smugglers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
12
Among the peasants it is not unknown for us to struggle against our harness, dragging our master's plow.
11
13
As the slave is owned, she, as any other animal, may be put to any purpose the master pleases.
11
14
Indeed, some men enjoy treating us so, putting us to manual labor, even when there is no need.
11
15
It is useful as a discipline, and, surely, it reminds us that we are slaves.
11
16
And even lighter labors may serve this purpose.
11
17
What slave has not scrubbed floors, naked, in shackles? How weary I was, in my place, carrying my burden! Surely it was not for this that I had been taught in the house to cook, clean, launder, and sew, to tie a tunic, to move with grace, to speak as a slave, to kneel, belly, lick, and kiss, to eat and drink from pans, to gratefully receive scraps from a master's hand, to apply cosmetics, to fetch a whip or slippers in my teeth, to bedeck myself with beads and armlets, to wear bells, to beg in a hundred ways, to present myself in chains, to please men in the furs.
11
18
"Burdens down, rest," we heard.
Among the peasants it is not unknown for us to struggle against our harness, dragging our master's plow.
As the slave is owned, she, as any other animal, may be put to any purpose the master pleases.
Indeed, some men enjoy treating us so, putting us to manual labor, even when there is no need.
It is useful as a discipline, and, surely, it reminds us that we are slaves.
And even lighter labors may serve this purpose.
What slave has not scrubbed floors, naked, in shackles? How weary I was, in my place, carrying my burden! Surely it was not for this that I had been taught in the house to cook, clean, launder, and sew, to tie a tunic, to move with grace, to speak as a slave, to kneel, belly, lick, and kiss, to eat and drink from pans, to gratefully receive scraps from a master's hand, to apply cosmetics, to fetch a whip or slippers in my teeth, to bedeck myself with beads and armlets, to wear bells, to beg in a hundred ways, to present myself in chains, to please men in the furs.
"Burdens down, rest," we heard.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 11)