Book 12. (7 results) Beasts of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
20
The young women, who are free, if the rules permit, as they sometimes do not, commonly wear masks, that their modesty be less grievously compromised by the brevity of their costume.
3
21
Should the girl be caught, however, her mask is removed.
3
22
The tunics of the girls are not removed, however, except those of the girls of the losing city, when the match has ended and the winner decided.
3
23
The win is determined when the young men of one city, or those left on the field, have secured the full hundred of the women of the "enemy".
3
24
A woman once bound and thrown to the girl pit, incidentally, may not be fetched forth by the young men of her city, except at the end of the match, and on the condition that they have proved victorious.
3
25
The captured women of the victorious city at the conclusion of the contest are of course released; they are robed and honored; the girls of the losing city, of course, are simply stripped and made slaves.
3
26
This may seem a cruel sport but some regard it as superior to a war; surely it is cleaner and there is less loss of life; this method of settling disputes, incidentally, is not used if it is felt that honor is somehow involved in the disagreement.
The young women, who are free, if the rules permit, as they sometimes do not, commonly wear masks, that their modesty be less grievously compromised by the brevity of their costume.
Should the girl be caught, however, her mask is removed.
The tunics of the girls are not removed, however, except those of the girls of the losing city, when the match has ended and the winner decided.
The win is determined when the young men of one city, or those left on the field, have secured the full hundred of the women of the "enemy".
A woman once bound and thrown to the girl pit, incidentally, may not be fetched forth by the young men of her city, except at the end of the match, and on the condition that they have proved victorious.
The captured women of the victorious city at the conclusion of the contest are of course released; they are robed and honored; the girls of the losing city, of course, are simply stripped and made slaves.
This may seem a cruel sport but some regard it as superior to a war; surely it is cleaner and there is less loss of life; this method of settling disputes, incidentally, is not used if it is felt that honor is somehow involved in the disagreement.
- (Beasts of Gor, Chapter )