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"collar "

Book 13. (1 results) Explorers of Gor (Individual Quote)

She had been kept in his own house, and taught the meaning of her collar, fully. - (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #63)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 63 She had been kept in his own house, and taught the meaning of her collar, fully.

Book 13. (7 results) Explorers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 60 I recalled how arrogant and peremptory she had been, until she had learned that she was no longer among men such as those of Earth.
1 61 Samos had had her taken below and branded, and used for the sport of the guards, and then penned.
1 62 I had thought that he would have sold her, but he had not.
1 63 She had been kept in his own house, and taught the meaning of her collar, fully.
1 64 I saw the brand on her thigh.
1 65 Although the brand was the first letter, in cursive Gorean script, of the most common Gorean expression for a slave girl, 'Kajira', its symbolism, I think, is much richer than this.
1 66 For example, in the slave brand, the 'Kef', though clearly a Kef and in cursive script, is more floral, in the extended, upturned, frondlike curls, than would be the common cursive Kef.
I recalled how arrogant and peremptory she had been, until she had learned that she was no longer among men such as those of Earth. Samos had had her taken below and branded, and used for the sport of the guards, and then penned. I had thought that he would have sold her, but he had not. She had been kept in his own house, and taught the meaning of her collar, fully. I saw the brand on her thigh. Although the brand was the first letter, in cursive Gorean script, of the most common Gorean expression for a slave girl, 'Kajira', its symbolism, I think, is much richer than this. For example, in the slave brand, the 'Kef', though clearly a Kef and in cursive script, is more floral, in the extended, upturned, frondlike curls, than would be the common cursive Kef. - (Explorers of Gor, Chapter 1)