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"civil " "law "

Book 21. (7 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
25 1416 If one could speak in that fashion, of "mere bodies," so to speak, and it was not typically Gorean to do so, she would not in bondage be considering whether or not to bestow her body, and for how long, but rather she would discover that it was his for the master to take, whenever he wished, however he wished, and for as long as he wished, for it would then belong not to her but to him, or he could order her to bring it to him, his property, in whatever attitude or posture he might please.
25 1417 But it is not typically Gorean to think in this fashion.
25 1418 The slave, for example, does not ask if the Master now wants the body of Gloria but, rather, does he want Gloria.
25 1419 In Gorean thought, and, indeed, Gorean law is explicit on this, what is owned is the whole slave.
25 1420 It is she who is owned, the whole woman, and uncompromisingly and totally.
25 1421 "How kind you are," she said, "to a woman met in such a place, one so poor she cannot even afford sandals, a suitable gown, and proper veiling.
25 1422 Do you object that I am so revealingly clad, and am not properly veiled? Does it scandalize you?" "No," I said.
If one could speak in that fashion, of "mere bodies," so to speak, and it was not typically Gorean to do so, she would not in bondage be considering whether or not to bestow her body, and for how long, but rather she would discover that it was his for the master to take, whenever he wished, however he wished, and for as long as he wished, for it would then belong not to her but to him, or he could order her to bring it to him, his property, in whatever attitude or posture he might please. But it is not typically Gorean to think in this fashion. The slave, for example, does not ask if the Master now wants the body of Gloria but, rather, does he want Gloria. In Gorean thought, and, indeed, Gorean law is explicit on this, what is owned is the whole slave. It is she who is owned, the whole woman, and uncompromisingly and totally. "How kind you are," she said, "to a woman met in such a place, one so poor she cannot even afford sandals, a suitable gown, and proper veiling. Do you object that I am so revealingly clad, and am not properly veiled? Does it scandalize you?" "No," I said. - (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter )