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"mercy "

Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)

In any event both females were helpless and at his mercy. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #1053)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 1053 In any event both females were helpless and at his mercy.

Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 1050 Whereas there are clear cases in which the codes apply or do not apply, they, as most recommendations, rules, principles, and such, perhaps unavoidably, were occasionally afflicted with a regrettable penumbra of obscurity.
1 1051 More acutely, a personal sense of honor, one which seems to me misplaced and overly sensitive, seems to have been involved, one clearly exceeding the parameters of the codes.
1 1052 One suspects this might have been the consequence of a personal idiosyncrasy, or even a residue lingering from an unnatural and ridiculous acculturation, one to which he had been subjected in the innocence of his childhood or adolescence.
1 1053 In any event both females were helpless and at his mercy.
1 1054 And yet he refrained, perhaps unconscionably, at least for the time, of making use of one, or both.
1 1055 If the Priest-Kings thought that his fellows in the caste of Warriors would scorn him for dealing with the goods in the container as one might expect, it seems to me they were incorrect.
1 1056 Too, if Cabot was of this opinion, he, too, in my view, was mistaken.
Whereas there are clear cases in which the codes apply or do not apply, they, as most recommendations, rules, principles, and such, perhaps unavoidably, were occasionally afflicted with a regrettable penumbra of obscurity. More acutely, a personal sense of honor, one which seems to me misplaced and overly sensitive, seems to have been involved, one clearly exceeding the parameters of the codes. One suspects this might have been the consequence of a personal idiosyncrasy, or even a residue lingering from an unnatural and ridiculous acculturation, one to which he had been subjected in the innocence of his childhood or adolescence. In any event both females were helpless and at his mercy. And yet he refrained, perhaps unconscionably, at least for the time, of making use of one, or both. If the Priest-Kings thought that his fellows in the caste of Warriors would scorn him for dealing with the goods in the container as one might expect, it seems to me they were incorrect. Too, if Cabot was of this opinion, he, too, in my view, was mistaken. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1)