Book 17. (1 results) Savages of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
648
It is not unusual for a Gorean male, who tends to be uninhibited in such matters, to clap his hands, or strike his thigh, or shout with pleasure, upon seeing a bared slave.
It is not unusual for a Gorean male, who tends to be uninhibited in such matters, to clap his hands, or strike his thigh, or shout with pleasure, upon seeing a bared slave.
- (Savages of Gor, Chapter 14, Sentence #648)
Book 17. (7 results) Savages of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
645
One might, in the case of a free woman, in deference to her modesty or dignity, avert one's gaze from her beauty.
14
646
This consideration, of course, is seldom, if ever, accorded to a slave.
14
647
One may examine her slowly and with care, and with attention to detail, and, if one feels she deserves it, with open and unconcealed admiration.
14
648
It is not unusual for a Gorean male, who tends to be uninhibited in such matters, to clap his hands, or strike his thigh, or shout with pleasure, upon seeing a bared slave.
14
649
These responses, which might be thought embarrassing or inappropriate in the case of a free woman, may fittingly be accorded, of course, to slaves, who are only lovely animals.
14
650
Even in the case of free women, the Gorean male, incidentally, disdains to feign disinterest in female beauty.
14
651
He, for better or for worse, has not been made a victim of the glandular suppression and life-shortening psychosexual reductionism inflicted, in varying degrees, on so many males in more pathological cultures.
One might, in the case of a free woman, in deference to her modesty or dignity, avert one's gaze from her beauty.
This consideration, of course, is seldom, if ever, accorded to a slave.
One may examine her slowly and with care, and with attention to detail, and, if one feels she deserves it, with open and unconcealed admiration.
It is not unusual for a Gorean male, who tends to be uninhibited in such matters, to clap his hands, or strike his thigh, or shout with pleasure, upon seeing a bared slave.
These responses, which might be thought embarrassing or inappropriate in the case of a free woman, may fittingly be accorded, of course, to slaves, who are only lovely animals.
Even in the case of free women, the Gorean male, incidentally, disdains to feign disinterest in female beauty.
He, for better or for worse, has not been made a victim of the glandular suppression and life-shortening psychosexual reductionism inflicted, in varying degrees, on so many males in more pathological cultures.
- (Savages of Gor, Chapter 14)