Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
587
This is particularly the case if the slave is beautiful, and of great interest to men.
3
588
I have also suggested that this attitude of the free female toward the slave seems to be motivated, paradoxically enough, by envy and jealousy.
3
589
In any event, slave girls fear free women greatly, as they, being mere slaves, are much at their mercy.
3
590
Once in Ar, several years ago, several free women, in their anger at slaves, and perhaps jealous of the pleasures of masters and slaves, entered a paga tavern with clubs and axes, seeking to destroy it.
3
591
This is, I believe, and example, though a rather extreme one, of a not unprecedented sort of psychological reaction, the attempt, by disparagement or action, motivated by envy, jealousy, resentment, or such, to keep from others pleasures which one oneself is unable, or unwilling, to enjoy.
3
592
In any event, as a historical note, the men in the tavern, being Gorean, and thus not being inhibited or confused by negativistic, antibiological traditions, quickly disarmed the women.
3
593
They then stripped them, bound their hands behind their back, put them of a neck rope, and, by means of switches, conducted them swiftly outside the tavern.
This is particularly the case if the slave is beautiful, and of great interest to men.
I have also suggested that this attitude of the free female toward the slave seems to be motivated, paradoxically enough, by envy and jealousy.
In any event, slave girls fear free women greatly, as they, being mere slaves, are much at their mercy.
Once in Ar, several years ago, several free women, in their anger at slaves, and perhaps jealous of the pleasures of masters and slaves, entered a paga tavern with clubs and axes, seeking to destroy it.
This is, I believe, and example, though a rather extreme one, of a not unprecedented sort of psychological reaction, the attempt, by disparagement or action, motivated by envy, jealousy, resentment, or such, to keep from others pleasures which one oneself is unable, or unwilling, to enjoy.
In any event, as a historical note, the men in the tavern, being Gorean, and thus not being inhibited or confused by negativistic, antibiological traditions, quickly disarmed the women.
They then stripped them, bound their hands behind their back, put them of a neck rope, and, by means of switches, conducted them swiftly outside the tavern.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter )