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Book 20. (1 results) Players of Gor (Individual Quote)

And surely the luscious creatures, though no more than animals bearing brands in their lovely hide, are aware of their desirability, their attractiveness, their importance, and meaning to men. - (Players of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #699)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
2 699 And surely the luscious creatures, though no more than animals bearing brands in their lovely hide, are aware of their desirability, their attractiveness, their importance, and meaning to men.

Book 20. (7 results) Players of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
2 696 Men sometimes kill for them.
2 697 Wars can be fought for them.
2 698 Cities can be bartered for them.
2 699 And surely the luscious creatures, though no more than animals bearing brands in their lovely hide, are aware of their desirability, their attractiveness, their importance, and meaning to men.
2 700 Surely they know the effect they can have on men.
2 701 Can fire not have a sense of its effect on straw? Are they not aware of the impact on a man of the mere sight of them.
2 702 Can they be ignorant of the igniting appeal of their particular configuration on a male? Can they not understand how he sees them, how he notes, and responds to, and relishes, the smallness of their feet, the slimness of their ankles, the curves of their calves, the sweetness of their thighs, the width of their hips, the narrowness of their waist, the delicious, expanding ascent therefrom, culminating in the lovely amplitudes of their bosom, with its alluring vulnerability and softness, the smallness and delicacy of their hands, the softness of their forearms, and shoulders, the excitements of their throat, the sensitivity and beauty of their face, the glory of their hair? Can they be puzzled that men bid strenuously upon them? Consider, too, their glances, their smiles, a gasp, a tiny whimper, a moan, the brightness of an eye, the trembling of a lip, their smallest movements, of a wrist or ankle, the lifting or turning of a head, the inadvertent flaring of a hip, the pointing of a toe, so curving the calf.
Men sometimes kill for them. Wars can be fought for them. Cities can be bartered for them. And surely the luscious creatures, though no more than animals bearing brands in their lovely hide, are aware of their desirability, their attractiveness, their importance, and meaning to men. Surely they know the effect they can have on men. Can fire not have a sense of its effect on straw? Are they not aware of the impact on a man of the mere sight of them. Can they be ignorant of the igniting appeal of their particular configuration on a male? Can they not understand how he sees them, how he notes, and responds to, and relishes, the smallness of their feet, the slimness of their ankles, the curves of their calves, the sweetness of their thighs, the width of their hips, the narrowness of their waist, the delicious, expanding ascent therefrom, culminating in the lovely amplitudes of their bosom, with its alluring vulnerability and softness, the smallness and delicacy of their hands, the softness of their forearms, and shoulders, the excitements of their throat, the sensitivity and beauty of their face, the glory of their hair? Can they be puzzled that men bid strenuously upon them? Consider, too, their glances, their smiles, a gasp, a tiny whimper, a moan, the brightness of an eye, the trembling of a lip, their smallest movements, of a wrist or ankle, the lifting or turning of a head, the inadvertent flaring of a hip, the pointing of a toe, so curving the calf. - (Players of Gor, Chapter 2)