Book 35. (1 results) Quarry of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
280
I suppose it must be pleasant for a man to own a beautiful woman, to have her in his collar and have absolute power over her, to be her absolute master, to have her at his feet, perhaps naked, perhaps in chains, desperate to please him, in all ways.
I suppose it must be pleasant for a man to own a beautiful woman, to have her in his collar and have absolute power over her, to be her absolute master, to have her at his feet, perhaps naked, perhaps in chains, desperate to please him, in all ways.
- (Quarry of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #280)
Book 35. (7 results) Quarry of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
277
An intelligent woman of course, makes a better slave.
1
278
She is, for example, more aware of her own feelings and needs, and more alert to, and aware of, others, and so on, than a simpler woman.
1
279
Also, having a far more sensitive body, she is much more responsive to punishment, which she will feel much more keenly than a more phlegmatic, duller woman, and will, accordingly, strive zealously, with all her intelligence, wit, beauty, and charm, to avoid it, by striving, to the best of her ability, to be fully pleasing to her master.
1
280
I suppose it must be pleasant for a man to own a beautiful woman, to have her in his collar and have absolute power over her, to be her absolute master, to have her at his feet, perhaps naked, perhaps in chains, desperate to please him, in all ways.
1
281
In any event, Gorean men, the uncompromising, masterful brutes, acculturated so differently from the men of Earth, do not seem to object to this arrangement.
1
282
I wonder if they understand, or care, for the feelings of their properties, their goods, if they are aware of, or care about, the interior life of the merchandise they have purchased, the joy a woman can find in bondage.
1
283
When the mistresses were satisfied, however grudgingly, we would be thrown food.
An intelligent woman of course, makes a better slave.
She is, for example, more aware of her own feelings and needs, and more alert to, and aware of, others, and so on, than a simpler woman.
Also, having a far more sensitive body, she is much more responsive to punishment, which she will feel much more keenly than a more phlegmatic, duller woman, and will, accordingly, strive zealously, with all her intelligence, wit, beauty, and charm, to avoid it, by striving, to the best of her ability, to be fully pleasing to her master.
I suppose it must be pleasant for a man to own a beautiful woman, to have her in his collar and have absolute power over her, to be her absolute master, to have her at his feet, perhaps naked, perhaps in chains, desperate to please him, in all ways.
In any event, Gorean men, the uncompromising, masterful brutes, acculturated so differently from the men of Earth, do not seem to object to this arrangement.
I wonder if they understand, or care, for the feelings of their properties, their goods, if they are aware of, or care about, the interior life of the merchandise they have purchased, the joy a woman can find in bondage.
When the mistresses were satisfied, however grudgingly, we would be thrown food.
- (Quarry of Gor, Chapter 1)