Book 13. (1 results) Explorers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
27
201
In a way they must be precious, though they are on a chain, as animals.
In a way they must be precious, though they are on a chain, as animals.
- (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 27, Sentence #201)
Book 13. (7 results) Explorers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
27
198
Suddenly, for the first time they suspect that this is something very important about them, that it is not merely a political irrelevancy, or embarrassment, that it is not merely a trivial contingent fact about their being, negligible in its significance and to be ignored if at all possible.
27
199
No, it is something which must be important about them, very important about them, at least in this place.
27
200
For the first time then they begin to suspect that they are very different from men, truly different, radically different, and that they are somehow very special, and have a considerable value of a sort, indeed, a value of such a sort that they have been found worth bringing to this world.
27
201
In a way they must be precious, though they are on a chain, as animals.
27
202
For the first time then they begin to have some sense of the profound and explosive meaning of their beauty, biologically, socially, sexually, and its striking desirability, its latent value, things scarcely considered before.
27
203
Yes, on this world, they begin to understand, they will have some purpose.
27
204
They kneel.
Suddenly, for the first time they suspect that this is something very important about them, that it is not merely a political irrelevancy, or embarrassment, that it is not merely a trivial contingent fact about their being, negligible in its significance and to be ignored if at all possible.
No, it is something which must be important about them, very important about them, at least in this place.
For the first time then they begin to suspect that they are very different from men, truly different, radically different, and that they are somehow very special, and have a considerable value of a sort, indeed, a value of such a sort that they have been found worth bringing to this world.
In a way they must be precious, though they are on a chain, as animals.
For the first time then they begin to have some sense of the profound and explosive meaning of their beauty, biologically, socially, sexually, and its striking desirability, its latent value, things scarcely considered before.
Yes, on this world, they begin to understand, they will have some purpose.
They kneel.
- (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 27)