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Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)

The free woman often hates the slave; the slave, often, feels not only fear of, but also pity for, the free woman. - (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #42)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 42 The free woman often hates the slave; the slave, often, feels not only fear of, but also pity for, the free woman.

Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 39 She is that desirable.
6 40 She knows that she is the most coveted, the most lusted-for, the most delectable, exciting, and sought of women, the female slave.
6 41 How could she not feel superior, in her sex, as a female, to the free woman in her vain, shallow trappings of dignity and station? Many have been free women, and they know the grief, the sorrow, the frustration, the misery, and loneliness, so often concealed within those cumbersome, ornate robes.
6 42 The free woman often hates the slave; the slave, often, feels not only fear of, but also pity for, the free woman.
6 43 So one might then contrast two prides, that of the scornful free woman, richly robed, elevated in society, switch in hand, and that of the timid, frightened creature, perhaps in a rag, a collared animal, who kneels before her.
6 44 The free woman has pride in her status, the slave in her sex, in her holistic fulfilled womanhood.
6 45 One might also note the gratitude of the slave.
She is that desirable. She knows that she is the most coveted, the most lusted-for, the most delectable, exciting, and sought of women, the female slave. How could she not feel superior, in her sex, as a female, to the free woman in her vain, shallow trappings of dignity and station? Many have been free women, and they know the grief, the sorrow, the frustration, the misery, and loneliness, so often concealed within those cumbersome, ornate robes. The free woman often hates the slave; the slave, often, feels not only fear of, but also pity for, the free woman. So one might then contrast two prides, that of the scornful free woman, richly robed, elevated in society, switch in hand, and that of the timid, frightened creature, perhaps in a rag, a collared animal, who kneels before her. The free woman has pride in her status, the slave in her sex, in her holistic fulfilled womanhood. One might also note the gratitude of the slave. - (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 6)