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Book 31. (1 results) Conspirators of Gor (Individual Quote)

"The beauty of a free woman," she once said to me, perhaps having acquired such views from Lady Delia, downstairs, the companion of Epicrates, "is a thousand times beyond that of a mere slave. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 11, Sentence #32)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
11 32 "The beauty of a free woman," she once said to me, perhaps having acquired such views from Lady Delia, downstairs, the companion of Epicrates, "is a thousand times beyond that of a mere slave.

Book 31. (7 results) Conspirators of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
11 29 I rejoiced that the Lady Bina had not been acculturated as a Gorean free woman, with their usual contempt for, and hostility toward, female slaves.
11 30 Accordingly, she saw no point in the exercise of arbitrary, gratifying authority, nor in the infliction of humiliation or pointless pain.
11 31 Part of this may well have been because it never occurred to her, in her unquestioning confidence in her own beauty and intelligence, to think of me, as other free women might, as some sort of rival.
11 32 "The beauty of a free woman," she once said to me, perhaps having acquired such views from Lady Delia, downstairs, the companion of Epicrates, "is a thousand times beyond that of a mere slave.
11 33 It is as the moons, and the stars, and other things, which I forget.
11 34 A slave's beauty, on the other hand, is that of a mere accessible, squirming beast, chained at a man's ring".
11 35 "Oh?" I said.
I rejoiced that the Lady Bina had not been acculturated as a Gorean free woman, with their usual contempt for, and hostility toward, female slaves. Accordingly, she saw no point in the exercise of arbitrary, gratifying authority, nor in the infliction of humiliation or pointless pain. Part of this may well have been because it never occurred to her, in her unquestioning confidence in her own beauty and intelligence, to think of me, as other free women might, as some sort of rival. "The beauty of a free woman," she once said to me, perhaps having acquired such views from Lady Delia, downstairs, the companion of Epicrates, "is a thousand times beyond that of a mere slave. It is as the moons, and the stars, and other things, which I forget. A slave's beauty, on the other hand, is that of a mere accessible, squirming beast, chained at a man's ring". "Oh?" I said. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 11)