Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
4
32
Hair, incidentally, is a common trade item in Gorean markets.
4
33
It is used for various purposes, for example, for insect whisks, for dusters, for cleaning and polishing pads, for cushionings, decorations and ropes, particularly catapult ropes, for which it is highly prized.
4
34
It is not unusual, incidentally, for slave girls, particularly for those who may not have proved superbly pleasing, as yet, to discover that their hair, even while it is still on them, is expected, like themselves, to serve various lowly, domestic purposes.
4
35
For example, when a girl, serving at a banquet, hears the command, "Hair," she knows she is to go to the guest and kneel, and lower her head, that her hair may be used as a napkin or wiping cloth, by means of which the free person, either male or female, may remove stains, crumbs or grease from his hands.
4
36
Similarly a girl's hair, if sufficiently long, may be used for the washing and cleaning of floors.
4
37
In this she is usually on her hands and knees, and naked and chained.
4
38
The hair is used in conjunction with the soap and water, in the appropriate buckets, being dipped in, and wrung out, and rinsed, and so on.
Hair, incidentally, is a common trade item in Gorean markets.
It is used for various purposes, for example, for insect whisks, for dusters, for cleaning and polishing pads, for cushionings, decorations and ropes, particularly catapult ropes, for which it is highly prized.
It is not unusual, incidentally, for slave girls, particularly for those who may not have proved superbly pleasing, as yet, to discover that their hair, even while it is still on them, is expected, like themselves, to serve various lowly, domestic purposes.
For example, when a girl, serving at a banquet, hears the command, "Hair," she knows she is to go to the guest and kneel, and lower her head, that her hair may be used as a napkin or wiping cloth, by means of which the free person, either male or female, may remove stains, crumbs or grease from his hands.
Similarly a girl's hair, if sufficiently long, may be used for the washing and cleaning of floors.
In this she is usually on her hands and knees, and naked and chained.
The hair is used in conjunction with the soap and water, in the appropriate buckets, being dipped in, and wrung out, and rinsed, and so on.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter )