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Book 21. (7 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
3 21 On the whole they seemed to be simple, plain women, peasant women, and peasant lasses.
3 22 One or two of them, I thought, might be suitable for the collar.
3 23 "Here!" cried the driver, laughing, throwing pieces of bread from a sack to one and then another of the women.
3 24 The first piece of bread he threw to the woman who had been the first to unhood and face-strip herself, perhaps thereby rewarding her for her intelligence.
3 25 He then threw pieces to certain others of the women, generally to those who were the prettiest and begged the hardest.
3 26 Sometimes, not unoften, these pieces of bread were torn away from the prettier, more feminine women by their brawnier, huskier, more masculine fellows.
3 27 Where there are no men, or no true men, to protect them, feminine women will, in a grotesque perversion of nature, be controlled, exploited and dominated by more masculine women, sometimes monsters and mere caricatures of men.
On the whole they seemed to be simple, plain women, peasant women, and peasant lasses. One or two of them, I thought, might be suitable for the collar. "Here!" cried the driver, laughing, throwing pieces of bread from a sack to one and then another of the women. The first piece of bread he threw to the woman who had been the first to unhood and face-strip herself, perhaps thereby rewarding her for her intelligence. He then threw pieces to certain others of the women, generally to those who were the prettiest and begged the hardest. Sometimes, not unoften, these pieces of bread were torn away from the prettier, more feminine women by their brawnier, huskier, more masculine fellows. Where there are no men, or no true men, to protect them, feminine women will, in a grotesque perversion of nature, be controlled, exploited and dominated by more masculine women, sometimes monsters and mere caricatures of men. - (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter )