Book 19. (1 results) Kajira of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
427
"They feel that a slave, who must love whomever she is commanded to love, can know nothing of love".
"They feel that a slave, who must love whomever she is commanded to love, can know nothing of love".
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 3, Sentence #427)
Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
424
"Some free women do not approve of slaves being permitted to wear talenders," she said, "or being permitted to have representations of them, like these, on their frocks.
3
425
Yet slaves do often wear them, the masters permitting it, and they are not an uncommon motif, the masters seeing to it, on their garments".
3
426
"Why do free women object?" I asked.
3
427
"They feel that a slave, who must love whomever she is commanded to love, can know nothing of love".
3
428
"Oh," I said.
3
429
"But I have been both free and slave," she said, "and, forgive me, Mistress, but I think that it is only a slave, in her vulnerability and helplessness, who can know what love truly is".
3
430
"You must love upon command?" I asked, horrified.
"Some free women do not approve of slaves being permitted to wear talenders," she said, "or being permitted to have representations of them, like these, on their frocks.
Yet slaves do often wear them, the masters permitting it, and they are not an uncommon motif, the masters seeing to it, on their garments".
"Why do free women object?" I asked.
"They feel that a slave, who must love whomever she is commanded to love, can know nothing of love".
"Oh," I said.
"But I have been both free and slave," she said, "and, forgive me, Mistress, but I think that it is only a slave, in her vulnerability and helplessness, who can know what love truly is".
"You must love upon command?" I asked, horrified.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 3)