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

The Kur female is large and dangerous, but the Kur male is even larger and more dangerous, and, in the final accounting, he may hold her in place, and do with her as he wishes. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 18, Sentence #35)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
18 35 The kur female is large and dangerous, but the kur male is even larger and more dangerous, and, in the final accounting, he may hold her in place, and do with her as he wishes.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
18 32 kur courtship, so to speak, is analogous to circling, and leaping, and feigned biting, which sometimes becomes dangerous.
18 33 Indeed, observers unaware of these things sometimes think two kurii are fighting, and not courting.
18 34 The kur male, like the human male, tends to be larger and stronger than the female of the species, which may well account for the survival of the species, as the female must be impregnated with or without her consent if the species is to survive.
18 35 The kur female is large and dangerous, but the kur male is even larger and more dangerous, and, in the final accounting, he may hold her in place, and do with her as he wishes.
18 36 To be sure, much depends on the nature of the species.
18 37 The general pervasiveness of the conjunction of the lips amongst humans suggests that something more than simple cultural idiosyncrasy may be involved, presumably on a level not immediately accessible to consciousness, a level in which the act is understood as symbolic, and analogous to, and suggestive of, and preliminary to, more intimate conjunctions.
18 38 This is perhaps why certain human cultures object to the meeting of the lips in the fashion in question.
kur courtship, so to speak, is analogous to circling, and leaping, and feigned biting, which sometimes becomes dangerous. Indeed, observers unaware of these things sometimes think two kurii are fighting, and not courting. The kur male, like the human male, tends to be larger and stronger than the female of the species, which may well account for the survival of the species, as the female must be impregnated with or without her consent if the species is to survive. The kur female is large and dangerous, but the kur male is even larger and more dangerous, and, in the final accounting, he may hold her in place, and do with her as he wishes. To be sure, much depends on the nature of the species. The general pervasiveness of the conjunction of the lips amongst humans suggests that something more than simple cultural idiosyncrasy may be involved, presumably on a level not immediately accessible to consciousness, a level in which the act is understood as symbolic, and analogous to, and suggestive of, and preliminary to, more intimate conjunctions. This is perhaps why certain human cultures object to the meeting of the lips in the fashion in question. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 18)