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"panther " "girls "

Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 712 We regarded the girls of this world as incredibly beautiful, from what we saw of them, but we did not really regard ourselves as so inferior to them, particularly as our training progressed.
8 713 One becomes more beautiful, of course, with the training, not simply as one learns to move, to care for one's appearance, and such, but, I think, even more importantly, as one begins to find oneself in one's natural place in the order of nature, as one's tensions and confusions are reduced, as one begins to discover what one really is, as one becomes gradually truer to oneself, and so on.
8 714 Beauty, as is well known, begins within.
8 715 Some of our teachers were girls of this world, of the same sort as we.
8 716 They, too, had their collars; they, too, were subject to discipline.
8 717 Our lessons were varied.
8 718 Some were in homely domestic matters, such as the making of bread and the sewing and laundering of garments.
We regarded the girls of this world as incredibly beautiful, from what we saw of them, but we did not really regard ourselves as so inferior to them, particularly as our training progressed. One becomes more beautiful, of course, with the training, not simply as one learns to move, to care for one's appearance, and such, but, I think, even more importantly, as one begins to find oneself in one's natural place in the order of nature, as one's tensions and confusions are reduced, as one begins to discover what one really is, as one becomes gradually truer to oneself, and so on. Beauty, as is well known, begins within. Some of our teachers were girls of this world, of the same sort as we. They, too, had their collars; they, too, were subject to discipline. Our lessons were varied. Some were in homely domestic matters, such as the making of bread and the sewing and laundering of garments. - (Witness of Gor, Chapter )