Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
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.
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.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30, Sentence #491)
Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
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.
30
493
And consider that free man who calculates so carefully the advantages of a companionship, who so carefully measures out the prospects of a relationship, as a merchant might weigh grain upon a scale.
30
494
He treats the woman as an instrument to his future, and thus treats her as more a slave than a slave.
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.
And consider that free man who calculates so carefully the advantages of a companionship, who so carefully measures out the prospects of a relationship, as a merchant might weigh grain upon a scale.
He treats the woman as an instrument to his future, and thus treats her as more a slave than a slave.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30)