Book 14. (7 results) Fighting Slave of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
18
6
These colors tend to be cultural for Goreans with respect to housings for domestic animals.
18
7
Blue and yellow, too, of course, are the colors of the slavers.
18
8
There may be a connection here, for the slave is, of course, regarded as a domestic animal.
18
9
To be sure, in barns and such the color yellow usually predominates, whereas in the colors of slavers, exhibited in such places as in the blue and yellow of the canvas covering slave wagons or in the blue and yellow of the tenting of slave pavilions, the blue and yellow is, or tends to be, more equally distributed, almost invariably occurring in stripes.
18
10
I knelt near the end of the line.
18
11
The mistress, with a long, tharlarion quirt, had begun her inspection.
18
12
When the Lady Melpomene had finished with me, after that long night of her use of me, she had held for me another draft of water, discolored by the reddish Tassa powder.
These colors tend to be cultural for Goreans with respect to housings for domestic animals.
Blue and yellow, too, of course, are the colors of the slavers.
There may be a connection here, for the slave is, of course, regarded as a domestic animal.
To be sure, in barns and such the color yellow usually predominates, whereas in the colors of slavers, exhibited in such places as in the blue and yellow of the canvas covering slave wagons or in the blue and yellow of the tenting of slave pavilions, the blue and yellow is, or tends to be, more equally distributed, almost invariably occurring in stripes.
I knelt near the end of the line.
The mistress, with a long, tharlarion quirt, had begun her inspection.
When the Lady Melpomene had finished with me, after that long night of her use of me, she had held for me another draft of water, discolored by the reddish Tassa powder.
- (Fighting Slave of Gor, Chapter )