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Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 95 How could she keep her dignity and respect in such a garment? She could not.
1 96 It would show that she was beautifully, and utterly and profoundly different from a man.
1 97 It was the sort of garment a man might throw to a woman to wear, amused to see her in it.
1 98 What sort of woman, of her own free will, would put on such a garment? Surely no real woman.
1 99 It was too feminine.
1 100 Surely only a terrible woman, a low woman, a shameful, wicked, worthless woman, a reproach to her entire sex, one with depths and needs antedating her century, one with needs not indexed to political orthodoxies, one with needs older and deeper, and more real and profound, more ancient and marvelous than those dictated to her by intellectual aberrations antithetical to biology, truth, history and time.
1 101 I put my hand before my mouth, frightened.
How could she keep her dignity and respect in such a garment? She could not. It would show that she was beautifully, and utterly and profoundly different from a man. It was the sort of garment a man might throw to a woman to wear, amused to see her in it. What sort of woman, of her own free will, would put on such a garment? Surely no real woman. It was too feminine. Surely only a terrible woman, a low woman, a shameful, wicked, worthless woman, a reproach to her entire sex, one with depths and needs antedating her century, one with needs not indexed to political orthodoxies, one with needs older and deeper, and more real and profound, more ancient and marvelous than those dictated to her by intellectual aberrations antithetical to biology, truth, history and time. I put my hand before my mouth, frightened. - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter )