Book 19. (1 results) Kajira of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
178
What brute would force her to such extremities? Too, how vulnerable a woman would make herself, placing herself so at the mercy of men, subject to being spurned, subject to his scorn and rejection.
What brute would force her to such extremities? Too, how vulnerable a woman would make herself, placing herself so at the mercy of men, subject to being spurned, subject to his scorn and rejection.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 8, Sentence #178)
Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
175
"Beg elsewhere, sluts!" I thought.
8
176
"Leave Drusus Rencius alone!" And how offensive that a woman should beg for love! Surely her intimate, desperate needs for attention, for affection and love were better concealed even from herself, if possible, and certainly, at least, from others! And if they must beg, the helpless sluts, did they not know how a woman begs, by looks, by glances, by small, hopeful services.
8
177
Surely a woman should not be expected to speak honestly in such matters.
8
178
What brute would force her to such extremities? Too, how vulnerable a woman would make herself, placing herself so at the mercy of men, subject to being spurned, subject to his scorn and rejection.
8
179
Yet how simple, how straightforward and liberating might be such a confession.
8
180
How beautiful it might be to so express one's vulnerability, and femininity, so tenderly, so piteously, so openly.
8
181
To be sure, one would expect such a confession only from a woman whose needs were both desperate and deep, a woman who had needs such as might characterize slaves.
"Beg elsewhere, sluts!" I thought.
"Leave Drusus Rencius alone!" And how offensive that a woman should beg for love! Surely her intimate, desperate needs for attention, for affection and love were better concealed even from herself, if possible, and certainly, at least, from others! And if they must beg, the helpless sluts, did they not know how a woman begs, by looks, by glances, by small, hopeful services.
Surely a woman should not be expected to speak honestly in such matters.
What brute would force her to such extremities? Too, how vulnerable a woman would make herself, placing herself so at the mercy of men, subject to being spurned, subject to his scorn and rejection.
Yet how simple, how straightforward and liberating might be such a confession.
How beautiful it might be to so express one's vulnerability, and femininity, so tenderly, so piteously, so openly.
To be sure, one would expect such a confession only from a woman whose needs were both desperate and deep, a woman who had needs such as might characterize slaves.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 8)