Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
355
Which female wishes to found inferior to another? Even a female not yet broken to her collar will strive to be found not less pleasing than another.
Which female wishes to found inferior to another? Even a female not yet broken to her collar will strive to be found not less pleasing than another.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #355)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
352
This would have little to do, of course, with any initial indecision which might perplex or trouble the male, however briefly, confronted with such riches, for he might eventually, surely, enjoy either as he might please, and in any order or frequency he might find interesting or convenient.
1
353
For example, it is not unknown for a Gorean man to have more than one slave, that they may desperately compete with one another, each striving zealously to please him more than the other, that she may become his favorite.
1
354
To be sure, this is a situation commonly productive of misery, jealously, and hatred amongst the slaves.
1
355
Which female wishes to found inferior to another? Even a female not yet broken to her collar will strive to be found not less pleasing than another.
1
356
Her own womanhood insists on this, as does her pride, her self-image, her concern for her own desirability, her sense of her own worth and value as a female.
1
357
How intolerable to be found less a female than another! But then perhaps, at a moment, one even unexpected, kneeling, she looks up, into his eyes, and sees suddenly that he is her master, in a sense a thousand times more profound than the indisputable and perfected legalities in which she is irretrievably enmeshed, and wholly helpless to alter or qualify.
1
358
Then perhaps the other woman is marketed, who may hope then to find a private master, as well.
This would have little to do, of course, with any initial indecision which might perplex or trouble the male, however briefly, confronted with such riches, for he might eventually, surely, enjoy either as he might please, and in any order or frequency he might find interesting or convenient.
For example, it is not unknown for a Gorean man to have more than one slave, that they may desperately compete with one another, each striving zealously to please him more than the other, that she may become his favorite.
To be sure, this is a situation commonly productive of misery, jealously, and hatred amongst the slaves.
Which female wishes to found inferior to another? Even a female not yet broken to her collar will strive to be found not less pleasing than another.
Her own womanhood insists on this, as does her pride, her self-image, her concern for her own desirability, her sense of her own worth and value as a female.
How intolerable to be found less a female than another! But then perhaps, at a moment, one even unexpected, kneeling, she looks up, into his eyes, and sees suddenly that he is her master, in a sense a thousand times more profound than the indisputable and perfected legalities in which she is irretrievably enmeshed, and wholly helpless to alter or qualify.
Then perhaps the other woman is marketed, who may hope then to find a private master, as well.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1)