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"home " "stone "

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

Considering these things, I shook with terror, for here I was not a free woman, exalted in society, possessed of a Home Stone. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 8, Sentence #293)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 293 Considering these things, I shook with terror, for here I was not a free woman, exalted in society, possessed of a home stone.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 290 And I feared that one such way had been found on Gor.
8 291 In any event, on Gor, as far as I could determine, the realities of sex not only existed, as they must, but, too, more significantly, they were acknowledged, and welcomed.
8 292 The mightinesses of nature, and the profound, interrelated, complementary differences between men and women were recognized and celebrated.
8 293 Considering these things, I shook with terror, for here I was not a free woman, exalted in society, possessed of a home stone.
8 294 I was the most vulnerable of all women, the female slave, in a world in which men had never relinquished their sovereignty, their nature as men, their possessiveness, their aggression, their claimancy, and lust, a world in which they might do as they wished with one such as I.
8 295 And yet I feared I had a place on such a world, a natural place, one for which I might be fitted, and one in which I belonged.
8 296 "What is wrong?" he asked.
And I feared that one such way had been found on Gor. In any event, on Gor, as far as I could determine, the realities of sex not only existed, as they must, but, too, more significantly, they were acknowledged, and welcomed. The mightinesses of nature, and the profound, interrelated, complementary differences between men and women were recognized and celebrated. Considering these things, I shook with terror, for here I was not a free woman, exalted in society, possessed of a home stone. I was the most vulnerable of all women, the female slave, in a world in which men had never relinquished their sovereignty, their nature as men, their possessiveness, their aggression, their claimancy, and lust, a world in which they might do as they wished with one such as I. And yet I feared I had a place on such a world, a natural place, one for which I might be fitted, and one in which I belonged. "What is wrong?" he asked. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 8)