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"hearing "

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

I had apparently lost consciousness shortly after hearing certain words, following which I had sensed, rather as though I might be somewhere else, that the sleen had not attacked me, that it might have been soothed, that it might now be gone. - (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 41, Sentence #77)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
41 77 I had apparently lost consciousness shortly after hearing certain words, following which I had sensed, rather as though I might be somewhere else, that the sleen had not attacked me, that it might have been soothed, that it might now be gone.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
41 74 Then I would fasten the disrobing loop, slowly, modestly, carefully.
41 75 I wished that he whom I hated might be on shore, watching me, not that it made any difference to me.
41 76 He had scorned me on the dock at Shipcamp, and I would scorn him here, but not, of course, to the extent of risking a beating.
41 77 I had apparently lost consciousness shortly after hearing certain words, following which I had sensed, rather as though I might be somewhere else, that the sleen had not attacked me, that it might have been soothed, that it might now be gone.
41 78 Certainly I no longer felt the heat of its breath on my back, nor was I any longer half- choked in the stifling reek of it, emanating from that deep, cavernous, fanged maw.
41 79 Then clearly the beast had been pacified, and was being fed.
41 80 I heard its feeding, the voracious tearing of the meat, the sound of its gorging, and it was then, I think, that I lost consciousness.
Then I would fasten the disrobing loop, slowly, modestly, carefully. I wished that he whom I hated might be on shore, watching me, not that it made any difference to me. He had scorned me on the dock at Shipcamp, and I would scorn him here, but not, of course, to the extent of risking a beating. I had apparently lost consciousness shortly after hearing certain words, following which I had sensed, rather as though I might be somewhere else, that the sleen had not attacked me, that it might have been soothed, that it might now be gone. Certainly I no longer felt the heat of its breath on my back, nor was I any longer half- choked in the stifling reek of it, emanating from that deep, cavernous, fanged maw. Then clearly the beast had been pacified, and was being fed. I heard its feeding, the voracious tearing of the meat, the sound of its gorging, and it was then, I think, that I lost consciousness. - (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 41)