Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
190
One does not know.
1
191
Both were, at the time, though without Home Stones, yet free women, you see, and thus, given the nobility of their status, not to be lightly put to one's pleasure, certainly not without suitable provocation.
1
192
It is difficult to convey the dignity, importance, and social standing of the Gorean free woman to one with no first-hand awareness of the matter.
1
193
They have a position and elevation in society which far transcends that of, say, the free woman of Earth who is usually not so much free as merely not yet enslaved.
1
194
The analogy is imperfect but suppose a society of rigid status, of severe hierarchy, and the rank and dignity that might be attached to the daughter of, say, a royal or noble house.
1
195
One in such a society would not be likely to think of bedding such an individual, at least as a serious project.
1
196
To be sure, a Goth, a Turk, a Saracen, a Dane might have fewer inhibitions in such a matter.
One does not know.
Both were, at the time, though without Home Stones, yet free women, you see, and thus, given the nobility of their status, not to be lightly put to one's pleasure, certainly not without suitable provocation.
It is difficult to convey the dignity, importance, and social standing of the Gorean free woman to one with no first-hand awareness of the matter.
They have a position and elevation in society which far transcends that of, say, the free woman of Earth who is usually not so much free as merely not yet enslaved.
The analogy is imperfect but suppose a society of rigid status, of severe hierarchy, and the rank and dignity that might be attached to the daughter of, say, a royal or noble house.
One in such a society would not be likely to think of bedding such an individual, at least as a serious project.
To be sure, a Goth, a Turk, a Saracen, a Dane might have fewer inhibitions in such a matter.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter )