Book 34. (1 results) Plunder of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
30
362
Many are the arts of love, harsh and gentle, fierce and tender, commanding and solicitous, and love's artists are patient and talented.
Many are the arts of love, harsh and gentle, fierce and tender, commanding and solicitous, and love's artists are patient and talented.
- (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 30, Sentence #362)
Book 34. (7 results) Plunder of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
30
359
"I beg! I beg!" He then bestowed upon me a single, deft touch.
30
360
"Yes, oh, yes, yes!" I wept, gratefully, yielding as the slave I had been made, as the slave I was.
30
361
On Gor, Ahn may be spent in making love, mornings, nights, evenings, and afternoons.
30
362
Many are the arts of love, harsh and gentle, fierce and tender, commanding and solicitous, and love's artists are patient and talented.
30
363
Kurik of Victoria knew well the handling of helpless slaves, their caressing and owning, their grasping and stroking, their conquest and fulfillment.
30
364
There was his breath, his tongue, his touch.
30
365
He could play the body of a slave, producing a rapture of sensations, much as the master of the czehar or kalika can play his lovely instrument, drawing forth its laughter and tears, its moans and cries, its pensive contemplations, its incitements and ardors, its valleys and mountains, its depths and its ecstasies.
"I beg! I beg!" He then bestowed upon me a single, deft touch.
"Yes, oh, yes, yes!" I wept, gratefully, yielding as the slave I had been made, as the slave I was.
On Gor, Ahn may be spent in making love, mornings, nights, evenings, and afternoons.
Many are the arts of love, harsh and gentle, fierce and tender, commanding and solicitous, and love's artists are patient and talented.
Kurik of Victoria knew well the handling of helpless slaves, their caressing and owning, their grasping and stroking, their conquest and fulfillment.
There was his breath, his tongue, his touch.
He could play the body of a slave, producing a rapture of sensations, much as the master of the czehar or kalika can play his lovely instrument, drawing forth its laughter and tears, its moans and cries, its pensive contemplations, its incitements and ardors, its valleys and mountains, its depths and its ecstasies.
- (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 30)