Book 32. (1 results) Smugglers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
25
236
She knows she has no choice in such matters but to be what she, in her deepest heart, most desires to be, a slave.
She knows she has no choice in such matters but to be what she, in her deepest heart, most desires to be, a slave.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 25, Sentence #236)
Book 32. (7 results) Smugglers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
25
233
Else we would not be slaves.
25
234
But the real reason the slave strives to be pleasing, fully pleasing, to her master, is because he is her master and she is a slave.
25
235
It is profoundly rewarding to her to be a slave, to be owned, dominated, and mastered.
25
236
She knows she has no choice in such matters but to be what she, in her deepest heart, most desires to be, a slave.
25
237
Why is it that we make such excellent slaves? Surely it is because it is what we want to be, and are.
25
238
Certainly I knew I wanted to kneel, and be owned, and had known this even from my former world.
25
239
Being brought to Gor was thus for me, in its way, more than a dream come true; it was a restoration of human biological reality, a recovery of a rightfulness of nature, a returning of me to the path of my heart, a bringing of me to a world in which I would have no choice but to be myself.
Else we would not be slaves.
But the real reason the slave strives to be pleasing, fully pleasing, to her master, is because he is her master and she is a slave.
It is profoundly rewarding to her to be a slave, to be owned, dominated, and mastered.
She knows she has no choice in such matters but to be what she, in her deepest heart, most desires to be, a slave.
Why is it that we make such excellent slaves? Surely it is because it is what we want to be, and are.
Certainly I knew I wanted to kneel, and be owned, and had known this even from my former world.
Being brought to Gor was thus for me, in its way, more than a dream come true; it was a restoration of human biological reality, a recovery of a rightfulness of nature, a returning of me to the path of my heart, a bringing of me to a world in which I would have no choice but to be myself.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 25)