Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
20
255
I sought to stand against them, rather than kneel gratefully at their feet! I flung myself, with like-minded women, into the games of power, exploiting my liberty to narrow and circumscribe that of men.
20
256
How I thought I hated them, while I really wanted to be put in their chains.
20
257
I used my sex, as I could, bestowing cordialities, hinting at favors, to influence men who, entrapped in the conventions of the cities, refrained from tearing away my veils and robes and putting me, as I deserved, in the bracelets of a slave.
20
258
How natural then that they should seek the beauties of the paga taverns, that they should raid far cities to bring back women, much as I, naked, in coffles.
20
259
How I, and my kind, hated slaves, women in their fitting place in nature, who, in radiance, and contentment, so joyful, were fulfilled by masters! How we envied those degraded, pathetic, despicable things in their tiny tunics, their bodies so bared, and collars, so unslippable, so closely encircling their throats, their thighs marked, as the animals they were, that all would recognize them as the properties of men.
20
260
How cruel I was to my own slaves, making them suffer in proxy for my own self-hatred.
20
261
How I kept them from men, that they might howl in anguish, and know something of my own unhappiness and deprivation.
I sought to stand against them, rather than kneel gratefully at their feet! I flung myself, with like-minded women, into the games of power, exploiting my liberty to narrow and circumscribe that of men.
How I thought I hated them, while I really wanted to be put in their chains.
I used my sex, as I could, bestowing cordialities, hinting at favors, to influence men who, entrapped in the conventions of the cities, refrained from tearing away my veils and robes and putting me, as I deserved, in the bracelets of a slave.
How natural then that they should seek the beauties of the paga taverns, that they should raid far cities to bring back women, much as I, naked, in coffles.
How I, and my kind, hated slaves, women in their fitting place in nature, who, in radiance, and contentment, so joyful, were fulfilled by masters! How we envied those degraded, pathetic, despicable things in their tiny tunics, their bodies so bared, and collars, so unslippable, so closely encircling their throats, their thighs marked, as the animals they were, that all would recognize them as the properties of men.
How cruel I was to my own slaves, making them suffer in proxy for my own self-hatred.
How I kept them from men, that they might howl in anguish, and know something of my own unhappiness and deprivation.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter )