Book 31. (1 results) Conspirators of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
229
It is natural then for the loser to blame not himself but the course, the starter, the conditions, the judge, the rules of the race, even that there is a race, at all.
It is natural then for the loser to blame not himself but the course, the starter, the conditions, the judge, the rules of the race, even that there is a race, at all.
- (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 8, Sentence #229)
Book 31. (7 results) Conspirators of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
226
A casteless society, an open society, in which elevation, wealth, and success is supposed to depend, or does depend, on the outcome of merit and free competition will obviously generate an enormous amount of frustration, jealousy, envy, and hostility.
8
227
In such a society most will fail to fulfill their ambitions and must almost inevitably fall short of achieving at least the greatest rewards and highest honors which such a society has to bestow.
8
228
In an open race to which all are invited and in which all are free to run there will be only one winner, and many losers.
8
229
It is natural then for the loser to blame not himself but the course, the starter, the conditions, the judge, the rules of the race, even that there is a race, at all.
8
230
The free woman of a high caste and the free woman of a lower caste commonly have one thing in common which unites them, securely, as free women.
8
231
That is their contempt of, and hatred for, the female slave.
8
232
How strange they find it that men should prefer the helpless female slave, lovely, obedient, needful, desperate to please, to themselves! How could such a thing be? But it seems that it might be.
A casteless society, an open society, in which elevation, wealth, and success is supposed to depend, or does depend, on the outcome of merit and free competition will obviously generate an enormous amount of frustration, jealousy, envy, and hostility.
In such a society most will fail to fulfill their ambitions and must almost inevitably fall short of achieving at least the greatest rewards and highest honors which such a society has to bestow.
In an open race to which all are invited and in which all are free to run there will be only one winner, and many losers.
It is natural then for the loser to blame not himself but the course, the starter, the conditions, the judge, the rules of the race, even that there is a race, at all.
The free woman of a high caste and the free woman of a lower caste commonly have one thing in common which unites them, securely, as free women.
That is their contempt of, and hatred for, the female slave.
How strange they find it that men should prefer the helpless female slave, lovely, obedient, needful, desperate to please, to themselves! How could such a thing be? But it seems that it might be.
- (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 8)