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"caste " "colors "

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
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.
12 477 Why should she feel herself entitled to raise caste? What was special about her? Why should a Merchant's daughter aspire to a higher caste? With what justification? Why should she be permitted to raise caste? Why should she not look for love in her own caste, or in a lower caste? Why should she not look for love wherever she found it, regardless of caste? But then I was not Gorean.
12 478 She was a free woman, of course; she could bargain, plan and plot to improve her position in society.
12 479 How different from a slave.
12 480 The slave's position in society is fixed, as fixed as the collar on her neck.
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. Why should she feel herself entitled to raise caste? What was special about her? Why should a Merchant's daughter aspire to a higher caste? With what justification? Why should she be permitted to raise caste? Why should she not look for love in her own caste, or in a lower caste? Why should she not look for love wherever she found it, regardless of caste? But then I was not Gorean. She was a free woman, of course; she could bargain, plan and plot to improve her position in society. How different from a slave. The slave's position in society is fixed, as fixed as the collar on her neck. - (Witness of Gor, Chapter )