Book 25. (1 results) Magicians of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
407
In any event, this attack on the part of the free woman, which happily had been only verbal, as they often are not, and the abused slave in any event dare not protest or object, as they are at the mercy of free persons, was in its way a profound compliment.
In any event, this attack on the part of the free woman, which happily had been only verbal, as they often are not, and the abused slave in any event dare not protest or object, as they are at the mercy of free persons, was in its way a profound compliment.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 12, Sentence #407)
Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
12
404
I am not certain of the explanation of this seemingly unreasoning, inexplicable hatred.
12
405
Perhaps they hate the slave for her beauty, for her joy, her truth, her perfections, her desirability, her happiness.
12
406
At the root of their hatred, perhaps, lies their own unhappiness and lack of fulfillment, their envy of the slave, joyful in her rightful place in nature.
12
407
In any event, this attack on the part of the free woman, which happily had been only verbal, as they often are not, and the abused slave in any event dare not protest or object, as they are at the mercy of free persons, was in its way a profound compliment.
12
408
So beautiful and exciting was the girl that the woman had naturally assumed she was that most marvelous, helpless, lovely and degraded of objects, the female slave.
12
409
"Turn left here," I said to the girl.
12
410
"Masters?" she asked, stopping.
I am not certain of the explanation of this seemingly unreasoning, inexplicable hatred.
Perhaps they hate the slave for her beauty, for her joy, her truth, her perfections, her desirability, her happiness.
At the root of their hatred, perhaps, lies their own unhappiness and lack of fulfillment, their envy of the slave, joyful in her rightful place in nature.
In any event, this attack on the part of the free woman, which happily had been only verbal, as they often are not, and the abused slave in any event dare not protest or object, as they are at the mercy of free persons, was in its way a profound compliment.
So beautiful and exciting was the girl that the woman had naturally assumed she was that most marvelous, helpless, lovely and degraded of objects, the female slave.
"Turn left here," I said to the girl.
"Masters?" she asked, stopping.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 12)