Book 16. (1 results) Guardsman of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
18
88
The analogy, incidentally, between the dog of the man of Earth and the slave girl of the Gorean male is a quite close one.
The analogy, incidentally, between the dog of the man of Earth and the slave girl of the Gorean male is a quite close one.
- (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 18, Sentence #88)
Book 16. (7 results) Guardsman of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
18
85
This is similar, too, of course, to the situation of the man of Earth and his dog.
18
86
He, too, may look upon his dog whenever and however he pleases, even when, if he wishes, the animal, curled in its place, is asleep.
18
87
That is his privilege.
18
88
The analogy, incidentally, between the dog of the man of Earth and the slave girl of the Gorean male is a quite close one.
18
89
Of course, the analogy is not perfect.
18
90
It is, for example, far more delicious to own a slave girl than a dog.
18
91
To be perfectly candid, however, the slave girl is a lovely, vulnerable, highly sensitive organism; the rational master commonly, unless she chooses to be troublesome, handles her with delicacy and affection; if she is displeasing, of course, even in small ways, she must expect to be shown little or no mercy; on the other hand, if she is obedient and loving, her life is likely to be a joy almost incomprehensible to the neurotic, masculinized, egotistical women of Earth.
This is similar, too, of course, to the situation of the man of Earth and his dog.
He, too, may look upon his dog whenever and however he pleases, even when, if he wishes, the animal, curled in its place, is asleep.
That is his privilege.
The analogy, incidentally, between the dog of the man of Earth and the slave girl of the Gorean male is a quite close one.
Of course, the analogy is not perfect.
It is, for example, far more delicious to own a slave girl than a dog.
To be perfectly candid, however, the slave girl is a lovely, vulnerable, highly sensitive organism; the rational master commonly, unless she chooses to be troublesome, handles her with delicacy and affection; if she is displeasing, of course, even in small ways, she must expect to be shown little or no mercy; on the other hand, if she is obedient and loving, her life is likely to be a joy almost incomprehensible to the neurotic, masculinized, egotistical women of Earth.
- (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 18)