Book 24. (7 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
893
She may love her brand and collar, and beg them, and rejoice in them, but I do not think this is merely because they make her so exciting, desirable and beautiful; I think it is also, at least, because they proclaim publicly to the world what she is, because by means of them her deepest truth, freeing her of concealments and deceits, cutting through confusions, resolving doubts, ending hesitancies, making her at last whole and one, to her joy, is marked openly upon her.
1
894
The true slave is within the woman.
1
895
She knows it is there.
1
896
She will not be happy until she terminates inward dissonances, until she casts out rending contradictions, until she achieves emotional, moral, physiological and psychological consistency, until she surrenders to her inward truths.
1
897
"May I speak, Master?" Temione asked of the burly fellow, swaying before him.
1
898
How bold she was! "Yes," he said, huskily.
1
899
"Does Master find a slave pleasing?" he asked.
She may love her brand and collar, and beg them, and rejoice in them, but I do not think this is merely because they make her so exciting, desirable and beautiful; I think it is also, at least, because they proclaim publicly to the world what she is, because by means of them her deepest truth, freeing her of concealments and deceits, cutting through confusions, resolving doubts, ending hesitancies, making her at last whole and one, to her joy, is marked openly upon her.
The true slave is within the woman.
She knows it is there.
She will not be happy until she terminates inward dissonances, until she casts out rending contradictions, until she achieves emotional, moral, physiological and psychological consistency, until she surrenders to her inward truths.
"May I speak, Master?" Temione asked of the burly fellow, swaying before him.
How bold she was! "Yes," he said, huskily.
"Does Master find a slave pleasing?" he asked.
- (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter )