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"desires "

Book 34. (1 results) Plunder of Gor (Individual Quote)

Needs and passions, desires and yearnings, should be no more things of shame than health and beauty. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 8, Sentence #49)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 49 Needs and passions, desires and yearnings, should be no more things of shame than health and beauty.

Book 34. (7 results) Plunder of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 46 Our differences from men were not only acknowledged by society, but, by brand, collar, and tunic, confirmed and celebrated.
8 47 Women such as I, not being free, were not permitted to deny or dismiss the truths, needs, and passions of our sex.
8 48 For women such as I, such pretenses would be no more than a laughable hypocrisy.
8 49 Needs and passions, desires and yearnings, should be no more things of shame than health and beauty.
8 50 Too, women such as I were not encased in proprieties and conventions, not hedged in by society, not permitted to hide ourselves behind veils, or within cumbersome robes, not permitted to bargain, to tease and taunt, to barter our favors for social or economic advancement.
8 51 We could be bought and sold.
8 52 We were the most female of all women, the most basic and fundamental of all women, and would find ourselves in our natural place, there where we belonged, at the feet of men, their slaves.
Our differences from men were not only acknowledged by society, but, by brand, collar, and tunic, confirmed and celebrated. Women such as I, not being free, were not permitted to deny or dismiss the truths, needs, and passions of our sex. For women such as I, such pretenses would be no more than a laughable hypocrisy. Needs and passions, desires and yearnings, should be no more things of shame than health and beauty. Too, women such as I were not encased in proprieties and conventions, not hedged in by society, not permitted to hide ourselves behind veils, or within cumbersome robes, not permitted to bargain, to tease and taunt, to barter our favors for social or economic advancement. We could be bought and sold. We were the most female of all women, the most basic and fundamental of all women, and would find ourselves in our natural place, there where we belonged, at the feet of men, their slaves. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 8)