Book 21. (1 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
22
219
Such games, in short, thus, encourage the lad, almost from infancy on, to reality and nature, to manhood and mastery.
Such games, in short, thus, encourage the lad, almost from infancy on, to reality and nature, to manhood and mastery.
- (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 22, Sentence #219)
Book 21. (7 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
22
216
Many Gorean games, incidentally, have features which encourage the development of properties regarded as desirable in a Gorean youth, such as courage, discipline, and honor.
22
217
Similarly, some of the games tend to encourage the development of audacity and leadership.
22
218
Others, like the one referred to by the proprietor, encourage the young man to see the female in terms of her most basic and radical meaning, in the terms of her deepest and true nature, that nature which is most biologically fundamental to her, that nature which is that of the inestimable prize, that of the most desirable prey, the most luscious quarry, that of she who is to be rightfully caught and, in all propriety, uncompromisingly embonded, she who is to be captured and mastered, absolutely, without which relationship she can never be completely fulfilled, she to whose owning and domination all of nature inclines, and without which the ancient sexual equations of humanity cannot be resolved.
22
219
Such games, in short, thus, encourage the lad, almost from infancy on, to reality and nature, to manhood and mastery.
22
220
"What a disgusting child," said Boabissia.
22
221
The lad had now disappeared.
22
222
She looked at Feiqa.
Many Gorean games, incidentally, have features which encourage the development of properties regarded as desirable in a Gorean youth, such as courage, discipline, and honor.
Similarly, some of the games tend to encourage the development of audacity and leadership.
Others, like the one referred to by the proprietor, encourage the young man to see the female in terms of her most basic and radical meaning, in the terms of her deepest and true nature, that nature which is most biologically fundamental to her, that nature which is that of the inestimable prize, that of the most desirable prey, the most luscious quarry, that of she who is to be rightfully caught and, in all propriety, uncompromisingly embonded, she who is to be captured and mastered, absolutely, without which relationship she can never be completely fulfilled, she to whose owning and domination all of nature inclines, and without which the ancient sexual equations of humanity cannot be resolved.
Such games, in short, thus, encourage the lad, almost from infancy on, to reality and nature, to manhood and mastery.
"What a disgusting child," said Boabissia.
The lad had now disappeared.
She looked at Feiqa.
- (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 22)