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"male " "slave "

Book 12. (1 results) Beasts of Gor (Individual Quote)

Too, slavery, because of its relation to a female's genetic predispositions, tends to free her to be herself, rather than an imitator of male-type values. - (Beasts of Gor, Chapter 21, Sentence #270)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 270 Too, slavery, because of its relation to a female's genetic predispositions, tends to free her to be herself, rather than an imitator of male-type values.

Book 12. (7 results) Beasts of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 267 "But consider the matter objectively.
21 268 Anything that was interesting about you when you were free remains interesting about you now.
21 269 But now you are additionally interesting because you are in helpless bondage.
21 270 Too, slavery, because of its relation to a female's genetic predispositions, tends to free her to be herself, rather than an imitator of male-type values.
21 271 It frees her individuality by liberating her from the necessities of pretense.
21 272 Too, slavery, by removing certain inhibitions and demands alien to a female's deepest nature, generally results in an increase in her beauty and energy; she is no longer as constricted and miserable, and needs no longer spend energy fighting to suppress herself and her natural desires, surely a grotesque and pathological misapplication of effort, a tragic waste of time and energy.
21 273 That the girl, thus, becomes more beautiful and energetic does not, of course, diminish her interest.
"But consider the matter objectively. Anything that was interesting about you when you were free remains interesting about you now. But now you are additionally interesting because you are in helpless bondage. Too, slavery, because of its relation to a female's genetic predispositions, tends to free her to be herself, rather than an imitator of male-type values. It frees her individuality by liberating her from the necessities of pretense. Too, slavery, by removing certain inhibitions and demands alien to a female's deepest nature, generally results in an increase in her beauty and energy; she is no longer as constricted and miserable, and needs no longer spend energy fighting to suppress herself and her natural desires, surely a grotesque and pathological misapplication of effort, a tragic waste of time and energy. That the girl, thus, becomes more beautiful and energetic does not, of course, diminish her interest. - (Beasts of Gor, Chapter 21)