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"kiss " "mistress "

Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
34 48 She did so.
34 49 "kiss the whip," he said.
34 50 "Again, lingeringly!" "Yes, Master," she said.
34 51 "Now lick and kiss it," he said.
34 52 "Yes, Master," she whispered.
34 53 It is difficult to bespeak with satisfactoriness the symbolism of the female slave, completely owned, fully his, in all ways, kneeling before the master, naked, in her collar, lifting her head, and licking and kissing his whip, fearfully, reverently.
34 54 Doubtless the symbolism in this goes far beyond what might be suggested in mere words, for it is fundamental and primal, a thing beyond words, a thing having to do with biology and natural rightfulness, with evolutionary selections and justifications, to be sure, expressed within the aesthetically stimulatory, specific, and enhancing context of a complex civilization unafraid to be the expression of nature, rather than her denier, rather than one fearful of her, and in flight from her repudiable but ordained raptures without which men and women must remain, ultimately, forever estranged from one another.
She did so. "kiss the whip," he said. "Again, lingeringly!" "Yes, Master," she said. "Now lick and kiss it," he said. "Yes, Master," she whispered. It is difficult to bespeak with satisfactoriness the symbolism of the female slave, completely owned, fully his, in all ways, kneeling before the master, naked, in her collar, lifting her head, and licking and kissing his whip, fearfully, reverently. Doubtless the symbolism in this goes far beyond what might be suggested in mere words, for it is fundamental and primal, a thing beyond words, a thing having to do with biology and natural rightfulness, with evolutionary selections and justifications, to be sure, expressed within the aesthetically stimulatory, specific, and enhancing context of a complex civilization unafraid to be the expression of nature, rather than her denier, rather than one fearful of her, and in flight from her repudiable but ordained raptures without which men and women must remain, ultimately, forever estranged from one another. - (Kajira of Gor, Chapter )