Book 24. (1 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
19
1240
Perhaps she hates her embonded sister because she senses the slave lives in a world denied to her, a distant, honest, wonderful world, one of submission and obedience, one of intimacy and service, one at last of radical, unabashed sexuality, one of pleasure and joy, one of love and fulfillment, one of nature—but nature enhanced with the refinements of civilization.
Perhaps she hates her embonded sister because she senses the slave lives in a world denied to her, a distant, honest, wonderful world, one of submission and obedience, one of intimacy and service, one at last of radical, unabashed sexuality, one of pleasure and joy, one of love and fulfillment, one of nature—but nature enhanced with the refinements of civilization.
- (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 19, Sentence #1240)
Book 24. (7 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
19
1237
I wonder sometimes if the free woman can understand these things.
19
1238
Sometimes I think they are utterly foreign to her, incomprehensible, far beyond her ken.
19
1239
Then I think of her inveterate hatred toward her embonded sisters, seemingly so inexplicable, and I wonder if she is truly so naive or uninformed as she pretends.
19
1240
Perhaps she hates her embonded sister because she senses the slave lives in a world denied to her, a distant, honest, wonderful world, one of submission and obedience, one of intimacy and service, one at last of radical, unabashed sexuality, one of pleasure and joy, one of love and fulfillment, one of nature—but nature enhanced with the refinements of civilization.
19
1241
But these matters, I suppose, are mysterious.
19
1242
Who can understand them? Perhaps it is not for a common soldier to delve into them.
19
1243
Perhaps it is best to let such secrets remain locked within the hearts of free women.
I wonder sometimes if the free woman can understand these things.
Sometimes I think they are utterly foreign to her, incomprehensible, far beyond her ken.
Then I think of her inveterate hatred toward her embonded sisters, seemingly so inexplicable, and I wonder if she is truly so naive or uninformed as she pretends.
Perhaps she hates her embonded sister because she senses the slave lives in a world denied to her, a distant, honest, wonderful world, one of submission and obedience, one of intimacy and service, one at last of radical, unabashed sexuality, one of pleasure and joy, one of love and fulfillment, one of nature—but nature enhanced with the refinements of civilization.
But these matters, I suppose, are mysterious.
Who can understand them? Perhaps it is not for a common soldier to delve into them.
Perhaps it is best to let such secrets remain locked within the hearts of free women.
- (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 19)