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"law " "gor "

Book 32. (7 results) Smugglers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
4 117 What are its women worth, save to be slaves? Collar them, master them.
4 118 Little, I fear, has prepared the unguarded slave fruit, so carefully and easily plucked from the orchards of Earth, for the world of gor.
4 119 Perhaps the major difference between these worlds is that in one nature is feared and rejected, with the result that civilization is essentially a denial of nature, almost its antithesis, a war conducted against a suspect nature, as though nature was an enemy, to be suppressed at all costs, rather than the foundation of one's very being.
4 120 On gor, civilization is not a flight from nature, but its acceptance, refinement, and enhancement.
4 121 gorean culture is built on nature, and within it, not against it, and apart from it.
4 122 Unhappiness and misery is a high cost to pay for the denial of nature; it is well, I suppose, at least, that the victims are encouraged to think well of themselves, taking their unease, grief, and wretchedness as badges of rectitude.
4 123 You may teach a bird that flight is evil, and break its wings, but its heart will always remember the sky.
What are its women worth, save to be slaves? Collar them, master them. Little, I fear, has prepared the unguarded slave fruit, so carefully and easily plucked from the orchards of Earth, for the world of gor. Perhaps the major difference between these worlds is that in one nature is feared and rejected, with the result that civilization is essentially a denial of nature, almost its antithesis, a war conducted against a suspect nature, as though nature was an enemy, to be suppressed at all costs, rather than the foundation of one's very being. On gor, civilization is not a flight from nature, but its acceptance, refinement, and enhancement. gorean culture is built on nature, and within it, not against it, and apart from it. Unhappiness and misery is a high cost to pay for the denial of nature; it is well, I suppose, at least, that the victims are encouraged to think well of themselves, taking their unease, grief, and wretchedness as badges of rectitude. You may teach a bird that flight is evil, and break its wings, but its heart will always remember the sky. - (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter )