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

Why, I wondered, can one not be left alone, to learn oneself and find oneself? Is that so terrible, to be what one is? Some profit, I supposed, from laws that would make nature illegal. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 66, Sentence #6)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
66 6 Why, I wondered, can one not be left alone, to learn oneself and find oneself? Is that so terrible, to be what one is? Some profit, I supposed, from laws that would make nature illegal.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
66 3 We felt comfortable, and meaningful, in our chains.
66 4 We felt, and were, deliciously helpless, and wholly owned.
66 5 How ancient and deep was our understanding of our sexuality, and how jejune and shallow then seemed to us the engineered distortions and strained falsities of our former world, distortions and falsities dictated by political agendas subservient to one tyranny or another.
66 6 Why, I wondered, can one not be left alone, to learn oneself and find oneself? Is that so terrible, to be what one is? Some profit, I supposed, from laws that would make nature illegal.
66 7 Is that not to the advantage of those who fear nature, who regard it as threatening their ambitions? But why should the goals of one be imposed as demands on others? Why is prescription superior to need and desire? If one desires to submit, to kneel, to serve, and love, why should one not do so? Who is to tell us that our blood is mistaken? How empty and ugly is a road to power that would deny one to oneself! "I feared Lord Grendel and Eve," said Paula, "but I wish them well".
66 8 They had left us, left, too, with the Lady Bina.
66 9 Apparently they would return to Ar.
We felt comfortable, and meaningful, in our chains. We felt, and were, deliciously helpless, and wholly owned. How ancient and deep was our understanding of our sexuality, and how jejune and shallow then seemed to us the engineered distortions and strained falsities of our former world, distortions and falsities dictated by political agendas subservient to one tyranny or another. Why, I wondered, can one not be left alone, to learn oneself and find oneself? Is that so terrible, to be what one is? Some profit, I supposed, from laws that would make nature illegal. Is that not to the advantage of those who fear nature, who regard it as threatening their ambitions? But why should the goals of one be imposed as demands on others? Why is prescription superior to need and desire? If one desires to submit, to kneel, to serve, and love, why should one not do so? Who is to tell us that our blood is mistaken? How empty and ugly is a road to power that would deny one to oneself! "I feared Lord Grendel and Eve," said Paula, "but I wish them well". They had left us, left, too, with the Lady Bina. Apparently they would return to Ar. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 66)