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"desires "

Book 7. (1 results) Captive of Gor (Individual Quote)

The Gorean man desires to own his female, to possess her absolutely, to have all power over her, to have her, hurrying and kneeling, at his beck and call. - (Captive of Gor, Chapter 13, Sentence #1018)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
13 1018 The Gorean man desires to own his female, to possess her absolutely, to have all power over her, to have her, hurrying and kneeling, at his beck and call.

Book 7. (7 results) Captive of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
13 1015 He is not interested in working out "meaningful sexual relationships," but in placing his woman, as he wishes, in the most meaningful of sexual relationships, bondage.
13 1016 He is not interested in treating her as a pretended equal, but in putting her to his feet, before him, in her place, naked and chained.
13 1017 He is not concerned with contractual niceties designed to cripple and stunt his manhood but with biological realities.
13 1018 The Gorean man desires to own his female, to possess her absolutely, to have all power over her, to have her, hurrying and kneeling, at his beck and call.
13 1019 I do not evaluate these matters, but report them as cultural facts.
13 1020 Gorean slave girls, statistically, despite their vulnerability, their helplessness, and the degradation in which their culture holds them, seem to be the happiest of women, radiant and liberated, certainly muchly different from their frustrated, petulant sisters of Earth, alienated from the biotruths of nature, embonded to barren sterilities, the true slaves of alien values.
13 1021 The collar is a badge of beauty, a tribute to the desirability of a woman.
He is not interested in working out "meaningful sexual relationships," but in placing his woman, as he wishes, in the most meaningful of sexual relationships, bondage. He is not interested in treating her as a pretended equal, but in putting her to his feet, before him, in her place, naked and chained. He is not concerned with contractual niceties designed to cripple and stunt his manhood but with biological realities. The Gorean man desires to own his female, to possess her absolutely, to have all power over her, to have her, hurrying and kneeling, at his beck and call. I do not evaluate these matters, but report them as cultural facts. Gorean slave girls, statistically, despite their vulnerability, their helplessness, and the degradation in which their culture holds them, seem to be the happiest of women, radiant and liberated, certainly muchly different from their frustrated, petulant sisters of Earth, alienated from the biotruths of nature, embonded to barren sterilities, the true slaves of alien values. The collar is a badge of beauty, a tribute to the desirability of a woman. - (Captive of Gor, Chapter 13)