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

The love of a free woman, then, to the extent that she can love, is beset with a great number and variety of considerations, with a thousand subtle and noxious calculations, plannings and governances. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30, Sentence #485)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
30 485 The love of a free woman, then, to the extent that she can love, is beset with a great number and variety of considerations, with a thousand subtle and noxious calculations, plannings and governances.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
30 482 All things are to be regulated with care, how and where he may touch her, and such.
30 483 She has her position in society to consider, her station and status.
30 484 She is hedged in with a thousand trammels and compromises, militating against her selfless surrender.
30 485 The love of a free woman, then, to the extent that she can love, is beset with a great number and variety of considerations, with a thousand subtle and noxious calculations, plannings and governances.
30 486 Needless to say, these several appurtenances do not enter into the ken of a slave.
30 487 Sometimes a free woman, who fears that her feelings for a projected companion, to her dismay and scandal, are more intense, suffusive, overwhelming and passionate than is proper for one of her status will withdraw from the projected match.
30 488 She is terrified to think of herself as, in effect, a slave.
All things are to be regulated with care, how and where he may touch her, and such. She has her position in society to consider, her station and status. She is hedged in with a thousand trammels and compromises, militating against her selfless surrender. The love of a free woman, then, to the extent that she can love, is beset with a great number and variety of considerations, with a thousand subtle and noxious calculations, plannings and governances. Needless to say, these several appurtenances do not enter into the ken of a slave. Sometimes a free woman, who fears that her feelings for a projected companion, to her dismay and scandal, are more intense, suffusive, overwhelming and passionate than is proper for one of her status will withdraw from the projected match. She is terrified to think of herself as, in effect, a slave. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30)