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"desires "

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

There are men and there are women, and the needs and desires of one are complementary to the needs and desires of the other. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 25, Sentence #699)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
25 699 There are men and there are women, and the needs and desires of one are complementary to the needs and desires of the other.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
25 696 That is clear to me.
25 697 What can compare with it? Compliance with pathological politicized prescriptions, designed to promote the power of unscrupulous, self-seeking misfits? All the social engineering, all the establishments in charge of controlling minds, all the power of the media melt away before the sight of a slave at one's feet.
25 698 With what would you reward a man who betrays his manhood? What will you give him that is worth more than his manhood? And I do not even comment on the other side of the coin, except to say that it is one coin, and it has another side.
25 699 There are men and there are women, and the needs and desires of one are complementary to the needs and desires of the other.
25 700 Each is a gift to the other, bestowed by nature, the slave to the master and the master to the slave.
25 701 Ellen wonders, sometimes, how many of her former colleagues, in their private lives, in their secret lives, repudiate the falsity, foolishness and treason of their public lives.
25 702 How many, she wonders, are dominated, stripped, belted in slave cuffs, and thrown to the bed, and from this surface look upward, into the eyes of masters? But let us put such speculations aside.
That is clear to me. What can compare with it? Compliance with pathological politicized prescriptions, designed to promote the power of unscrupulous, self-seeking misfits? All the social engineering, all the establishments in charge of controlling minds, all the power of the media melt away before the sight of a slave at one's feet. With what would you reward a man who betrays his manhood? What will you give him that is worth more than his manhood? And I do not even comment on the other side of the coin, except to say that it is one coin, and it has another side. There are men and there are women, and the needs and desires of one are complementary to the needs and desires of the other. Each is a gift to the other, bestowed by nature, the slave to the master and the master to the slave. Ellen wonders, sometimes, how many of her former colleagues, in their private lives, in their secret lives, repudiate the falsity, foolishness and treason of their public lives. How many, she wonders, are dominated, stripped, belted in slave cuffs, and thrown to the bed, and from this surface look upward, into the eyes of masters? But let us put such speculations aside. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 25)