Even when I thought I despised and hated men, I still wanted keenly to be attractive to them".
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"Do you understand the meaning of that?" asked Cabot.
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"I do not think I understood it then, at least fully, at least in full consciousness," she said, "but now its meaning is quite clear.
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Its meaning is that we are women, and exist to be desired and sought, and that we wish, and wish desperately, despite what we might claim, to be desired and sought, and that we exist to be beautiful, and loving, for men, and that we exist to please and serve men, that we are the complementary sex to theirs, and each sex is to be a perfection to the other, and take its meaning from the other, and only as utterly different are the sexes united in the wondrous and precious perfection of wholeness, and this is what brings us to the feet of men, hopeful and submissive, to be accepted, if only we fully understood our meaning, and ourselves, as their slaves".
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"And so your beauty is so important to you," said Cabot, "and, on Gor, it is a beauty that does not fade".
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"So I have been given to understand, Master," she said.
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"Have no fear," said Cabot, "I will eventually give you an opportunity to clean yourself, to tend your hair, as you can, to wash and press your tunic with warm stones, such things".
Even when I thought I despised and hated men, I still wanted keenly to be attractive to them".
"Do you understand the meaning of that?" asked Cabot.
"I do not think I understood it then, at least fully, at least in full consciousness," she said, "but now its meaning is quite clear.
Its meaning is that we are women, and exist to be desired and sought, and that we wish, and wish desperately, despite what we might claim, to be desired and sought, and that we exist to be beautiful, and loving, for men, and that we exist to please and serve men, that we are the complementary sex to theirs, and each sex is to be a perfection to the other, and take its meaning from the other, and only as utterly different are the sexes united in the wondrous and precious perfection of wholeness, and this is what brings us to the feet of men, hopeful and submissive, to be accepted, if only we fully understood our meaning, and ourselves, as their slaves".
"And so your beauty is so important to you," said Cabot, "and, on Gor, it is a beauty that does not fade".
"So I have been given to understand, Master," she said.
"Have no fear," said Cabot, "I will eventually give you an opportunity to clean yourself, to tend your hair, as you can, to wash and press your tunic with warm stones, such things".
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter )