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"attire "

Book 19. (1 results) Kajira of Gor (Individual Quote)

How keenly must slaves be aware, I thought, of the nature of their attire, and its meaning, of its revelatory brevity and its lack of a nether closure, of how such an apparel publicly brandished their beauty and, dismayingly, denied to their sweetest and most delicious intimacies the least of shieldings, even a wisp of silk; such intimacies, I understood,, in a slave, such receptivities and sensitivities, were to be unguarded, and defenseless; they must be, in all their inviting helplessness, available to a master's most casually sought access. - (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 7, Sentence #86)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
7 86 How keenly must slaves be aware, I thought, of the nature of their attire, and its meaning, of its revelatory brevity and its lack of a nether closure, of how such an apparel publicly brandished their beauty and, dismayingly, denied to their sweetest and most delicious intimacies the least of shieldings, even a wisp of silk; such intimacies, I understood,, in a slave, such receptivities and sensitivities, were to be unguarded, and defenseless; they must be, in all their inviting helplessness, available to a master's most casually sought access.

Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
7 83 "The slave, at any instant," he said, "is to be available to the master".
7 84 "I see," I said.
7 85 How easily, I thought, might such a garment be thrust up, to my waist, over my hips! How vulnerable would be slaves to the attentions of masters! How might such women feel? I considered on the whole how I was clothed, or scarcely clothed.
7 86 How keenly must slaves be aware, I thought, of the nature of their attire, and its meaning, of its revelatory brevity and its lack of a nether closure, of how such an apparel publicly brandished their beauty and, dismayingly, denied to their sweetest and most delicious intimacies the least of shieldings, even a wisp of silk; such intimacies, I understood,, in a slave, such receptivities and sensitivities, were to be unguarded, and defenseless; they must be, in all their inviting helplessness, available to a master's most casually sought access.
7 87 She, and all of her, you see, willing or no, belongs to her master.
7 88 "Do you wish to continue with this project?" he asked.
7 89 "Yes," I said.
"The slave, at any instant," he said, "is to be available to the master". "I see," I said. How easily, I thought, might such a garment be thrust up, to my waist, over my hips! How vulnerable would be slaves to the attentions of masters! How might such women feel? I considered on the whole how I was clothed, or scarcely clothed. How keenly must slaves be aware, I thought, of the nature of their attire, and its meaning, of its revelatory brevity and its lack of a nether closure, of how such an apparel publicly brandished their beauty and, dismayingly, denied to their sweetest and most delicious intimacies the least of shieldings, even a wisp of silk; such intimacies, I understood,, in a slave, such receptivities and sensitivities, were to be unguarded, and defenseless; they must be, in all their inviting helplessness, available to a master's most casually sought access. She, and all of her, you see, willing or no, belongs to her master. "Do you wish to continue with this project?" he asked. "Yes," I said. - (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 7)