Book 7. (1 results) Captive of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
723
If he is a young tarnsman, and she is his first girl, he will take her back to his own city, and display her for his family and friends, and she will dance for him, and serve him, at the Collaring Feast.
If he is a young tarnsman, and she is his first girl, he will take her back to his own city, and display her for his family and friends, and she will dance for him, and serve him, at the Collaring Feast.
- (Captive of Gor, Chapter 12, Sentence #723)
Book 7. (7 results) Captive of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
720
They haul them to the saddle, in flight, there securing them, stripping them and fastening them to the binding rings.
12
721
It is a favorite sport of tarnsmen to streak their tarn over an enemy city and, in such a fashion, capture an enemy girl from one of the city's high bridges, carrying her off, while the citizens of the city scream in fury, shaking their fists at the bold one.
12
722
In moments her garments flutter down among the towers and she is his, bound on her back across the saddle before him, his prize.
12
723
If he is a young tarnsman, and she is his first girl, he will take her back to his own city, and display her for his family and friends, and she will dance for him, and serve him, at the Collaring Feast.
12
724
If he is a brutal tarnsman, he may take her rudely, should he wish, above the clouds, above her own city, before even his tarn has left its walls.
12
725
If he should be even more brutal, but more subtly so, more to be feared by a woman, he will, in the long flight back to his city, caress her into submission, until she has no choice but to yield herself to him, wholly, as a surrendered slave girl.
12
726
When he then unbinds her from the saddle rings, she, so devastatingly subdued, well knows herself his.
They haul them to the saddle, in flight, there securing them, stripping them and fastening them to the binding rings.
It is a favorite sport of tarnsmen to streak their tarn over an enemy city and, in such a fashion, capture an enemy girl from one of the city's high bridges, carrying her off, while the citizens of the city scream in fury, shaking their fists at the bold one.
In moments her garments flutter down among the towers and she is his, bound on her back across the saddle before him, his prize.
If he is a young tarnsman, and she is his first girl, he will take her back to his own city, and display her for his family and friends, and she will dance for him, and serve him, at the Collaring Feast.
If he is a brutal tarnsman, he may take her rudely, should he wish, above the clouds, above her own city, before even his tarn has left its walls.
If he should be even more brutal, but more subtly so, more to be feared by a woman, he will, in the long flight back to his city, caress her into submission, until she has no choice but to yield herself to him, wholly, as a surrendered slave girl.
When he then unbinds her from the saddle rings, she, so devastatingly subdued, well knows herself his.
- (Captive of Gor, Chapter 12)