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"male " "slave "

Book 34. (1 results) Plunder of Gor (Individual Quote)

Here, at least in the case of a slave, there was nothing furtive, sly, quick, apologetic, or clandestine in those male looks, no more than to regard a dog or horse on my former world. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 51, Sentence #288)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
51 288 Here, at least in the case of a slave, there was nothing furtive, sly, quick, apologetic, or clandestine in those male looks, no more than to regard a dog or horse on my former world.

Book 34. (7 results) Plunder of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
51 285 I thought I was much more aware of that sort of thing than he suspected.
51 286 I did not think it took long on Gor for a woman, collared and tunicked, to realize how men looked upon her.
51 287 Who could mistake those bold, appraising glances, those frank, zestful inspections, which well reminded a girl she was a purchasable object.
51 288 Here, at least in the case of a slave, there was nothing furtive, sly, quick, apologetic, or clandestine in those male looks, no more than to regard a dog or horse on my former world.
51 289 Similarly, on Gor, the excitements and glories of biology, even in the case of free women, have never been denounced as shameful nor treated as crimes, inviting the intervention of guardsmen.
51 290 Rather they are welcomed and celebrated.
51 291 "It is natural," said Kurik, "for a guard, or a man, looking upon a slave, to ponder how she might look, stripped, and helpless, chained at his slave ring".
I thought I was much more aware of that sort of thing than he suspected. I did not think it took long on Gor for a woman, collared and tunicked, to realize how men looked upon her. Who could mistake those bold, appraising glances, those frank, zestful inspections, which well reminded a girl she was a purchasable object. Here, at least in the case of a slave, there was nothing furtive, sly, quick, apologetic, or clandestine in those male looks, no more than to regard a dog or horse on my former world. Similarly, on Gor, the excitements and glories of biology, even in the case of free women, have never been denounced as shameful nor treated as crimes, inviting the intervention of guardsmen. Rather they are welcomed and celebrated. "It is natural," said Kurik, "for a guard, or a man, looking upon a slave, to ponder how she might look, stripped, and helpless, chained at his slave ring". - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 51)