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"love "

Book 26. (1 results) Witness of Gor (Individual Quote)

What had love to do with such things, I wondered. - (Witness of Gor, Chapter 12, Sentence #473)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
12 473 What had love to do with such things, I wondered.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
12 470 Why should I not, in virtue of my beauty, attain to the highest of castes, assuming the Merchants was not already regarded, correctly, of course, as such—yes, to the very highest of castes, saving only that of the Initiates, of course".
12 471 It seemed clear to me that she did not really believe, whatever might be her protestations, that the Merchants was a high caste.
12 472 She would be only too eager, it seemed, to "raise caste".
12 473 What had love to do with such things, I wondered.
12 474 Why should she wish to raise caste? Surely that was not truly important.
12 475 Caste considerations seemed to me artificial, and rather meaningless, except as they tended to reflect sets of related occupations.
12 476 Suppose there was something to caste.
Why should I not, in virtue of my beauty, attain to the highest of castes, assuming the Merchants was not already regarded, correctly, of course, as such—yes, to the very highest of castes, saving only that of the Initiates, of course". It seemed clear to me that she did not really believe, whatever might be her protestations, that the Merchants was a high caste. She would be only too eager, it seemed, to "raise caste". What had love to do with such things, I wondered. Why should she wish to raise caste? Surely that was not truly important. Caste considerations seemed to me artificial, and rather meaningless, except as they tended to reflect sets of related occupations. Suppose there was something to caste. - (Witness of Gor, Chapter 12)