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Book 16. (1 results) Guardsman of Gor (Individual Quote)

It would be a very foolish slave who would carry herself before a free woman as she is expected to carry herself before free men. - (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 21, Sentence #504)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 504 It would be a very foolish slave who would carry herself before a free woman as she is expected to carry herself before free men.

Book 16. (7 results) Guardsman of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 501 Well, so, too, must be the animal who is the slave female.
21 502 Perhaps a cautionary word might be in order having to do with the appearance and demeanor of the slave female in the vicinity of the free woman.
21 503 There her appearance and deportment is usually, and wisely, transformed.
21 504 It would be a very foolish slave who would carry herself before a free woman as she is expected to carry herself before free men.
21 505 Before the scrutiny of the free woman she is likely to lapse from joyful beauty to cringing scullion.
21 506 She will not meet the eyes of the free woman; she is scarcely likely to leave her knees or lift her head; her body is bent and seems smaller; she seems to wilt and tremble; she tries to draw down the hem of her tunic; she grasps the edges of her tunic and tries to draw them closed, to conceal better the delights of her bosom; she is likely to whisper; her voice is uncertain, and scarcely audible.
21 507 These are not inauthentic dissemblings; they are a real witness to the slave's terror of the authority and power of the free woman.
Well, so, too, must be the animal who is the slave female. Perhaps a cautionary word might be in order having to do with the appearance and demeanor of the slave female in the vicinity of the free woman. There her appearance and deportment is usually, and wisely, transformed. It would be a very foolish slave who would carry herself before a free woman as she is expected to carry herself before free men. Before the scrutiny of the free woman she is likely to lapse from joyful beauty to cringing scullion. She will not meet the eyes of the free woman; she is scarcely likely to leave her knees or lift her head; her body is bent and seems smaller; she seems to wilt and tremble; she tries to draw down the hem of her tunic; she grasps the edges of her tunic and tries to draw them closed, to conceal better the delights of her bosom; she is likely to whisper; her voice is uncertain, and scarcely audible. These are not inauthentic dissemblings; they are a real witness to the slave's terror of the authority and power of the free woman. - (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 21)