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"guilty "

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

But might they not, some of them, in the secrecy of their own domiciles, be as deplorably guilty in this regard? Certainly the joy, the radiance, of many slaves, encountered in the markets and streets, suggested that. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 50, Sentence #26)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
50 26 But might they not, some of them, in the secrecy of their own domiciles, be as deplorably guilty in this regard? Certainly the joy, the radiance, of many slaves, encountered in the markets and streets, suggested that.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
50 23 And as time passes she begins, fearfully, trying to conceal her joy, to suspect it may be so.
50 24 Has her master not, for example, of late become less patient and more strict with her, as though he might be fighting something within himself, something unwelcome, which he was unwilling to acknowledge? Surely she must now strive to do nothing which might cause him to rid himself of her.
50 25 She is well aware that he would be subjected to the scorn of his peers, did they, in amusement, suspect that he might care for a slave.
50 26 But might they not, some of them, in the secrecy of their own domiciles, be as deplorably guilty in this regard? Certainly the joy, the radiance, of many slaves, encountered in the markets and streets, suggested that.
50 27 But she is well aware that, given the man he is, she has much more to fear from his own possible self reproach than from the jibes of others.
50 28 His sense of himself, of what is proper for him, might be her greatest danger.
50 29 She feels vulnerable.
And as time passes she begins, fearfully, trying to conceal her joy, to suspect it may be so. Has her master not, for example, of late become less patient and more strict with her, as though he might be fighting something within himself, something unwelcome, which he was unwilling to acknowledge? Surely she must now strive to do nothing which might cause him to rid himself of her. She is well aware that he would be subjected to the scorn of his peers, did they, in amusement, suspect that he might care for a slave. But might they not, some of them, in the secrecy of their own domiciles, be as deplorably guilty in this regard? Certainly the joy, the radiance, of many slaves, encountered in the markets and streets, suggested that. But she is well aware that, given the man he is, she has much more to fear from his own possible self reproach than from the jibes of others. His sense of himself, of what is proper for him, might be her greatest danger. She feels vulnerable. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 50)