Book 18. (1 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
33
323
Who can truly understand the emotional depths and needs, eons old, of these flowers of nature and evolution? How natural, then, it is, that the truly loving man will concern himself not with her distortions and perversions, ultimately barren, but with her emotional and sensuous truths, ancient and deep within her, with what might be called her biological and natural fulfillment.
Who can truly understand the emotional depths and needs, eons old, of these flowers of nature and evolution? How natural, then, it is, that the truly loving man will concern himself not with her distortions and perversions, ultimately barren, but with her emotional and sensuous truths, ancient and deep within her, with what might be called her biological and natural fulfillment.
- (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 33, Sentence #323)
Book 18. (7 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
33
320
How much they can sense.
33
321
How simple and crude, how naive, sometimes seems the intelligence of men compared to the intelligence of women.
33
322
What deep and wonderful creatures they are.
33
323
Who can truly understand the emotional depths and needs, eons old, of these flowers of nature and evolution? How natural, then, it is, that the truly loving man will concern himself not with her distortions and perversions, ultimately barren, but with her emotional and sensuous truths, ancient and deep within her, with what might be called her biological and natural fulfillment.
33
324
Then I shook such thoughts from my mind, for she was simply a slave, and was to be treated as such.
33
325
"Oh!" she said.
33
326
I cinched the strap closely on her body.
How much they can sense.
How simple and crude, how naive, sometimes seems the intelligence of men compared to the intelligence of women.
What deep and wonderful creatures they are.
Who can truly understand the emotional depths and needs, eons old, of these flowers of nature and evolution? How natural, then, it is, that the truly loving man will concern himself not with her distortions and perversions, ultimately barren, but with her emotional and sensuous truths, ancient and deep within her, with what might be called her biological and natural fulfillment.
Then I shook such thoughts from my mind, for she was simply a slave, and was to be treated as such.
"Oh!" she said.
I cinched the strap closely on her body.
- (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 33)