Book 16. (7 results) Guardsman of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
20
1024
In the first case, where no true distinction exists, which is the authentic case, the girl, in effect, says, "I am for sale.
20
1025
Buy me, and love me!" In the second case, the girl, in effect, says, "Here is a fine slave.
20
1026
Are you not interested in her?" In the second case, of course, the Gorean is interested, though the girl may not understand this clearly, in not only the merchandise but the girl who is displaying the merchandise.
20
1027
She might truly be terrified if she understood that it was she herself he intended to own, and, in fact, was going to own, she the exhibitor of the merchandise as well as she, the merchandise exhibited.
20
1028
Goreans, as I may have mentioned, are interested in owning the whole woman, in all her sweetness, depth, complexity and individuality.
20
1029
They, and their whips and chains, settle for nothing less.
20
1030
To think of the embonded woman as a slave object is in one sense quite correct, but, in another sense, it is a perversion of, and a failure to understand, the intimate and beautiful relations which can exist between masters and slaves.
In the first case, where no true distinction exists, which is the authentic case, the girl, in effect, says, "I am for sale.
Buy me, and love me!" In the second case, the girl, in effect, says, "Here is a fine slave.
Are you not interested in her?" In the second case, of course, the Gorean is interested, though the girl may not understand this clearly, in not only the merchandise but the girl who is displaying the merchandise.
She might truly be terrified if she understood that it was she herself he intended to own, and, in fact, was going to own, she the exhibitor of the merchandise as well as she, the merchandise exhibited.
Goreans, as I may have mentioned, are interested in owning the whole woman, in all her sweetness, depth, complexity and individuality.
They, and their whips and chains, settle for nothing less.
To think of the embonded woman as a slave object is in one sense quite correct, but, in another sense, it is a perversion of, and a failure to understand, the intimate and beautiful relations which can exist between masters and slaves.
- (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter )