Book 32. (1 results) Smugglers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
15
682
Did he not know we were all women? Did he not understand that in this very slave house almost all the slaves, perhaps all but I, writhing, bucking, begging, crying out, pleading, had been such "fine, noble, proud, free Gorean women"? Doubtless he meant freewomen, women not yet collared.
Did he not know we were all women? Did he not understand that in this very slave house almost all the slaves, perhaps all but I, writhing, bucking, begging, crying out, pleading, had been such "fine, noble, proud, free Gorean women"? Doubtless he meant free women, women not yet collared.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 15, Sentence #682)
Book 32. (7 results) Smugglers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
15
679
"You are not a fine, noble, proud, free Gorean woman," he said.
15
680
"You are only a barbarian".
15
681
Did he think Gorean women any different, I wondered.
15
682
Did he not know we were all women? Did he not understand that in this very slave house almost all the slaves, perhaps all but I, writhing, bucking, begging, crying out, pleading, had been such "fine, noble, proud, free Gorean women"? Doubtless he meant freewomen, women not yet collared.
15
683
There, I supposed, was a dramatic difference.
15
684
I had had no encounters with Gorean freewomen, but I had been much apprised by my instructresses, and many fellow slaves, of their alleged nature.
15
685
These putative informants had entertained what I supposed to be not only a dim, but a radically distorted, and, I hoped, a certainly extreme view, of Gorean freewomen, regarding them to be haughty, short-tempered, impatient, supercilious, rigid, demanding, unbending, arrogant, boastful, pretentious, hostile, suspicious, cruel, severe, unhappy, unfulfilled, egotistical, and self-centered.
"You are not a fine, noble, proud, free Gorean woman," he said.
"You are only a barbarian".
Did he think Gorean women any different, I wondered.
Did he not know we were all women? Did he not understand that in this very slave house almost all the slaves, perhaps all but I, writhing, bucking, begging, crying out, pleading, had been such "fine, noble, proud, free Gorean women"? Doubtless he meant free women, women not yet collared.
There, I supposed, was a dramatic difference.
I had had no encounters with Gorean free women, but I had been much apprised by my instructresses, and many fellow slaves, of their alleged nature.
These putative informants had entertained what I supposed to be not only a dim, but a radically distorted, and, I hoped, a certainly extreme view, of Gorean free women, regarding them to be haughty, short-tempered, impatient, supercilious, rigid, demanding, unbending, arrogant, boastful, pretentious, hostile, suspicious, cruel, severe, unhappy, unfulfilled, egotistical, and self-centered.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 15)