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"pity "

Book 29. (1 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Individual Quote)

They fear free women, but, in their way, pity them for they cannot know the ecstasies, fulfillments, and joys of the slave. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #228)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 228 They fear free women, but, in their way, pity them for they cannot know the ecstasies, fulfillments, and joys of the slave.

Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 225 This, of course, is a temporary phase, for, soon, the slave, whether a barbarian fetched hither for the block, or a Gorean free woman reduced to bondage, discovers how special, different, and wonderful she has now become, that she is now a mere slave.
10 226 They come to understand that they are now desired, as never before.
10 227 They come to see free women as dangerous, but pathetically unhappy, repressed creatures.
10 228 They fear free women, but, in their way, pity them for they cannot know the ecstasies, fulfillments, and joys of the slave.
10 229 They come to a new understanding of their bodies, and are at peace with them, perhaps for the first time in their lives, and rejoice in them, and come to love them, and come to see them as delicious and lovely contrasts to the sternness and power, the rudeness and brutishness, of the male bodies, to which they will be forced to submit.
10 230 They come to understand the magnificent complementarity of nature, and their lovely role in this complementarity.
10 231 They would not now be other than they are, for they have finally come to understand the glorious preciousness of themselves, even though they may sell for no more than a handful of copper tarsks.
This, of course, is a temporary phase, for, soon, the slave, whether a barbarian fetched hither for the block, or a Gorean free woman reduced to bondage, discovers how special, different, and wonderful she has now become, that she is now a mere slave. They come to understand that they are now desired, as never before. They come to see free women as dangerous, but pathetically unhappy, repressed creatures. They fear free women, but, in their way, pity them for they cannot know the ecstasies, fulfillments, and joys of the slave. They come to a new understanding of their bodies, and are at peace with them, perhaps for the first time in their lives, and rejoice in them, and come to love them, and come to see them as delicious and lovely contrasts to the sternness and power, the rudeness and brutishness, of the male bodies, to which they will be forced to submit. They come to understand the magnificent complementarity of nature, and their lovely role in this complementarity. They would not now be other than they are, for they have finally come to understand the glorious preciousness of themselves, even though they may sell for no more than a handful of copper tarsks. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 10)