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Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)

And she was in a very different culture, one with different laws, customs, and values. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 9, Sentence #88)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
9 88 And she was in a very different culture, one with different laws, customs, and values.

Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
9 85 How different they were from what she knew, in their naturalness, in their laughter and assurances, in their colorful robes and miens, all this so different from the tepidities, apathies, lethargies, and gray conformities of her old world! She had not known such people could exist.
9 86 To her they were alien, not only linguistically but, more importantly, more frighteningly, culturally.
9 87 This is what human beings can be, she thought, so different from those of Earth! She was not on her own world.
9 88 And she was in a very different culture, one with different laws, customs, and values.
9 89 Things were so unfamiliar.
9 90 What could she, given no choice, brought helplessly here, be to these people? What could one such as she be on this world? She feared she knew.
9 91 How strange it is, she thought, to be fully clothed, according to one's culture, so decorously, even primly, and yet, here, in a different culture, in an identical garmenture, being presented, being put on view, to feel so exposed, to feel oneself an eccentric object of curiosity.
How different they were from what she knew, in their naturalness, in their laughter and assurances, in their colorful robes and miens, all this so different from the tepidities, apathies, lethargies, and gray conformities of her old world! She had not known such people could exist. To her they were alien, not only linguistically but, more importantly, more frighteningly, culturally. This is what human beings can be, she thought, so different from those of Earth! She was not on her own world. And she was in a very different culture, one with different laws, customs, and values. Things were so unfamiliar. What could she, given no choice, brought helplessly here, be to these people? What could one such as she be on this world? She feared she knew. How strange it is, she thought, to be fully clothed, according to one's culture, so decorously, even primly, and yet, here, in a different culture, in an identical garmenture, being presented, being put on view, to feel so exposed, to feel oneself an eccentric object of curiosity. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 9)