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"hair "

Book 3. (1 results) Priest-Kings of Gor (Individual Quote)

To another human, of course, my hair alone, which is a shaggy, bright red, would have been a clearly recognizable feature, but Priest-Kings, as I may have indicated, tend to have extremely casual visual discrimination and are, moreover, I would gather, color blind. - (Priest-Kings of Gor, Chapter 27, Sentence #48)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
27 48 To another human, of course, my hair alone, which is a shaggy, bright red, would have been a clearly recognizable feature, but Priest-Kings, as I may have indicated, tend to have extremely casual visual discrimination and are, moreover, I would gather, color blind.

Book 3. (7 results) Priest-Kings of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
27 45 His reactions were almost those that a human might have had if he could hear something in the room with him but had not yet been able to see it.
27 46 At last his antennae fastened on me but I am sure the Priest-King was annoyed that he did not receive the strong signals he would have if I had been wearing my own scent-infixed tunic.
27 47 Without the tunic I had worn I probably did not seem much different to him from any other male Mul he had encountered in the Nest.
27 48 To another human, of course, my hair alone, which is a shaggy, bright red, would have been a clearly recognizable feature, but Priest-Kings, as I may have indicated, tend to have extremely casual visual discrimination and are, moreover, I would gather, color blind.
27 49 The colors that are found in the Nest are always in the areas frequented by Muls.
27 50 The only Priest-King in the Nest who could have recognized me immediately, and perhaps from a distance, was probably Misk, who knew me not as a Mul but a friend.
27 51 "You are undoubtedly the Noble Guard of the Chamber where I may have my tunic fixed with scent-marks," I called jovially.
His reactions were almost those that a human might have had if he could hear something in the room with him but had not yet been able to see it. At last his antennae fastened on me but I am sure the Priest-King was annoyed that he did not receive the strong signals he would have if I had been wearing my own scent-infixed tunic. Without the tunic I had worn I probably did not seem much different to him from any other male Mul he had encountered in the Nest. To another human, of course, my hair alone, which is a shaggy, bright red, would have been a clearly recognizable feature, but Priest-Kings, as I may have indicated, tend to have extremely casual visual discrimination and are, moreover, I would gather, color blind. The colors that are found in the Nest are always in the areas frequented by Muls. The only Priest-King in the Nest who could have recognized me immediately, and perhaps from a distance, was probably Misk, who knew me not as a Mul but a friend. "You are undoubtedly the Noble Guard of the Chamber where I may have my tunic fixed with scent-marks," I called jovially. - (Priest-Kings of Gor, Chapter 27)