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"dance "

Book 35. (1 results) Quarry of Gor (Individual Quote)

The dance of the free woman states her dignity and worth; the dance of a slave is quite different; it exhibits an incredibly desirable domestic animal, one which may be bought and sold. - (Quarry of Gor, Chapter 46, Sentence #564)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
46 564 The dance of the free woman states her dignity and worth; the dance of a slave is quite different; it exhibits an incredibly desirable domestic animal, one which may be bought and sold.

Book 35. (7 results) Quarry of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
46 561 How utterly different is the movement of a slave from that of a free woman, how uninhibited, how free, how profound, how unapologetically, sinuously brazen, how radically and rawly female; the free woman dances her beauty, the slave, in all her beauty, dances her brand and collar.
46 562 The free woman is lovely; the slave is lovely and patently needful.
46 563 The free woman, in her freedom, must hold back, for she is free; the slave, in her slavery, need not do so and may not do so.
46 564 The dance of the free woman states her dignity and worth; the dance of a slave is quite different; it exhibits an incredibly desirable domestic animal, one which may be bought and sold.
46 565 I was a few moments into the dance, or behavior, perhaps fifteen or twenty Ihn, when I realized I had not yet felt the lash.
46 566 I continued, waiting for the stroke of the leather.
46 567 I was aware of the nearby hanging tharlarion-oil lamp, dangling on its three small chains.
How utterly different is the movement of a slave from that of a free woman, how uninhibited, how free, how profound, how unapologetically, sinuously brazen, how radically and rawly female; the free woman dances her beauty, the slave, in all her beauty, dances her brand and collar. The free woman is lovely; the slave is lovely and patently needful. The free woman, in her freedom, must hold back, for she is free; the slave, in her slavery, need not do so and may not do so. The dance of the free woman states her dignity and worth; the dance of a slave is quite different; it exhibits an incredibly desirable domestic animal, one which may be bought and sold. I was a few moments into the dance, or behavior, perhaps fifteen or twenty Ihn, when I realized I had not yet felt the lash. I continued, waiting for the stroke of the leather. I was aware of the nearby hanging tharlarion-oil lamp, dangling on its three small chains. - (Quarry of Gor, Chapter 46)