Book 31. (1 results) Conspirators of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
265
No longer is she a man's equal, or superior, the haughty, protected possessor of a homestone, but a master's property.
No longer is she a man's equal, or superior, the haughty, protected possessor of a Home Stone, but a master's property.
- (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #265)
Book 31. (7 results) Conspirators of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
262
Gorean men enjoy having former free women, particularly those who were formerly rich, or of the higher castes, in their collars.
10
263
It is probably difficult for one of my former world to understand the awesome dignity and importance, the social and cultural status, of the Gorean free woman, for she possesses a homestone, a status incomparably far above that of the usual free woman of my former world.
10
264
Accordingly, it would be difficult for one of my former world to understand the cataclysmic reversal of fortune involved should such a creature, formerly so powerful, exalted, and revered, suddenly find herself stripped and collared, a caught beast, helpless at a stranger's feet.
10
265
No longer is she a man's equal, or superior, the haughty, protected possessor of a homestone, but a master's property.
10
266
But in time, they, too, lick and kiss the whip lovingly, for they, too, are women.
10
267
There is a common Gorean saying that curiosity is not becoming in a kajira.
10
268
Certainly few things help us to keep our condition as clearly in mind as our being kept in ignorance.
Gorean men enjoy having former free women, particularly those who were formerly rich, or of the higher castes, in their collars.
It is probably difficult for one of my former world to understand the awesome dignity and importance, the social and cultural status, of the Gorean free woman, for she possesses a home stone, a status incomparably far above that of the usual free woman of my former world.
Accordingly, it would be difficult for one of my former world to understand the cataclysmic reversal of fortune involved should such a creature, formerly so powerful, exalted, and revered, suddenly find herself stripped and collared, a caught beast, helpless at a stranger's feet.
No longer is she a man's equal, or superior, the haughty, protected possessor of a home stone, but a master's property.
But in time, they, too, lick and kiss the whip lovingly, for they, too, are women.
There is a common Gorean saying that curiosity is not becoming in a kajira.
Certainly few things help us to keep our condition as clearly in mind as our being kept in ignorance.
- (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 10)