Book 31. (7 results) Conspirators of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
147
How different he and so many others were from most of the men I had known on my former world.
16
148
What had been done, I wondered, to the men of my former world? How superior to me, in so many ways, were these brutes of Gor! How slave I felt before them! Were such as I not fittingly owned by such as they, as the females of so many species of my former world were, in effect, owned by their males? To my chagrin such things were now, on Gor, indisputably obvious to me.
16
149
I was unable to deny them, as much as I might wish to do so.
16
150
And such relationships on Gor were institutionalized, fixed in law! I was collared! I sensed that I belonged on the block, stripped, before such men, who might, fittingly, purchase me as an object, or toy.
16
151
It is strange how one can sense such things, but, to my irritation, I was in no doubt about it.
16
152
Before such men women could be but properties; they belonged at the feet of such men, as slaves.
16
153
But if one were a slave, why should one not be a slave? Is there not a freedom, a liberation, a relief, in such an acknowledgement? Are the miseries of a free woman so superior to the joys of a mastered, loving slave? Let each consider the matter for herself.
How different he and so many others were from most of the men I had known on my former world.
What had been done, I wondered, to the men of my former world? How superior to me, in so many ways, were these brutes of Gor! How slave I felt before them! Were such as I not fittingly owned by such as they, as the females of so many species of my former world were, in effect, owned by their males? To my chagrin such things were now, on Gor, indisputably obvious to me.
I was unable to deny them, as much as I might wish to do so.
And such relationships on Gor were institutionalized, fixed in law! I was collared! I sensed that I belonged on the block, stripped, before such men, who might, fittingly, purchase me as an object, or toy.
It is strange how one can sense such things, but, to my irritation, I was in no doubt about it.
Before such men women could be but properties; they belonged at the feet of such men, as slaves.
But if one were a slave, why should one not be a slave? Is there not a freedom, a liberation, a relief, in such an acknowledgement? Are the miseries of a free woman so superior to the joys of a mastered, loving slave? Let each consider the matter for herself.
- (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter )