Book 14. (1 results) Fighting Slave of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
897
The women, now, were of a whole new breed, somehow magically different from all women of the past, free and independent.
The women, now, were of a whole new breed, somehow magically different from all women of the past, free and independent.
- (Fighting Slave of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #897)
Book 14. (7 results) Fighting Slave of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
894
I hoped that I had not ruined everything that might have been between us.
1
895
Was I not strong enough to be solicitous, sweet, gentle, tender and feminine? I hoped she would still like me, that she could still permit me a chance to try to please her.
1
896
I realized then, with a force I had not felt before, probably because I had not found a woman so exciting as she before, that, in this society, men must strive to please women, that they must, if they wish to relate to them, be and do exactly what the women wish and require, else the women will simply remain aloof.
1
897
The women, now, were of a whole new breed, somehow magically different from all women of the past, free and independent.
1
898
It was they who would set their terms, and it was the men who would, if they wished to know them, comply with their wishes.
1
899
But was this not all right? Surely women have a right to demand that men comply precisely with their wishes.
1
900
If the men do not do so, the women simply need have nothing to do with them.
I hoped that I had not ruined everything that might have been between us.
Was I not strong enough to be solicitous, sweet, gentle, tender and feminine? I hoped she would still like me, that she could still permit me a chance to try to please her.
I realized then, with a force I had not felt before, probably because I had not found a woman so exciting as she before, that, in this society, men must strive to please women, that they must, if they wish to relate to them, be and do exactly what the women wish and require, else the women will simply remain aloof.
The women, now, were of a whole new breed, somehow magically different from all women of the past, free and independent.
It was they who would set their terms, and it was the men who would, if they wished to know them, comply with their wishes.
But was this not all right? Surely women have a right to demand that men comply precisely with their wishes.
If the men do not do so, the women simply need have nothing to do with them.
- (Fighting Slave of Gor, Chapter 1)