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"law " "gor "

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 84 Where they come from they are taught to repudiate nature, to replace her with conventions and principles alien to their deepest needs and feelings.
6 85 They are taught to revere frigidity, like a free woman, to praise inertness as dignity, to fear the raptures of uncompromised submission.
6 86 Denied themselves, denied masters, they writhe in frustration, and, hating themselves, and their imprisonment, they think they hate men.
6 87 Taught to deny their sex, starved for sex, they find themselves then on gor, in collars, at the feet of men who will have whatever they want from them, and what they want, too, in their hearts, to be had from them.
6 88 Their exile from their own bodies and needs is at last over.
6 89 It is as though, at last, starving and thirsting, they were permitted food, though from the hand of a man, and granted water, though from a pan at his feet.
6 90 Often the happiest moment in the life of one of them, to that point, is when the auctioneer closes his hand, and they realize that, exposed and desired, exhibited and bid upon, they have been sold.
Where they come from they are taught to repudiate nature, to replace her with conventions and principles alien to their deepest needs and feelings. They are taught to revere frigidity, like a free woman, to praise inertness as dignity, to fear the raptures of uncompromised submission. Denied themselves, denied masters, they writhe in frustration, and, hating themselves, and their imprisonment, they think they hate men. Taught to deny their sex, starved for sex, they find themselves then on gor, in collars, at the feet of men who will have whatever they want from them, and what they want, too, in their hearts, to be had from them. Their exile from their own bodies and needs is at last over. It is as though, at last, starving and thirsting, they were permitted food, though from the hand of a man, and granted water, though from a pan at his feet. Often the happiest moment in the life of one of them, to that point, is when the auctioneer closes his hand, and they realize that, exposed and desired, exhibited and bid upon, they have been sold. - (Mariners of Gor, Chapter )