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"desires "

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

Sometimes, too, a free man will withdraw from a match if he suspects that the woman's desires and needs are unworthy of a free woman. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30, Sentence #489)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
30 489 Sometimes, too, a free man will withdraw from a match if he suspects that the woman's desires and needs are unworthy of a free woman.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
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.
30 489 Sometimes, too, a free man will withdraw from a match if he suspects that the woman's desires and needs are unworthy of a free woman.
30 490 After all, he is looking for a free woman, not a slave, a proud, lofty, noble, free woman, one who will fulfill the customs of her station, and prove to be a suitable asset, particularly with respect to connections and career.
30 491 So pity the poor free woman who would yield herself as a slave to her lover and does not do so, for her enmeshment in the chains of pride.
30 492 And scorn the foolish free man who cannot recognize and accept, and rejoice in, the slave in a woman.
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. Sometimes, too, a free man will withdraw from a match if he suspects that the woman's desires and needs are unworthy of a free woman. After all, he is looking for a free woman, not a slave, a proud, lofty, noble, free woman, one who will fulfill the customs of her station, and prove to be a suitable asset, particularly with respect to connections and career. So pity the poor free woman who would yield herself as a slave to her lover and does not do so, for her enmeshment in the chains of pride. And scorn the foolish free man who cannot recognize and accept, and rejoice in, the slave in a woman. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30)