Book 19. (1 results) Kajira of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
60
To be sure, the young men who had captured me had not been loath to subject me to lengthy, appreciative scrutinies that would have been more appropriate, I feared, to a slave than a free woman.
To be sure, the young men who had captured me had not been loath to subject me to lengthy, appreciative scrutinies that would have been more appropriate, I feared, to a slave than a free woman.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 17, Sentence #60)
Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
57
Somehow, angrily, I felt rejected.
17
58
I realized I had straightened my body beneath their scrutiny.
17
59
I wondered why I had done that.
17
60
To be sure, the young men who had captured me had not been loath to subject me to lengthy, appreciative scrutinies that would have been more appropriate, I feared, to a slave than a free woman.
17
61
But that, however, embarrassing and shameful, had been rather private.
17
62
Here I was chained on a platform, my arms over my head, at the side of a public street, where hundreds might, should they care to do so, look upon me unimpeded and at length.
17
63
I trusted no one would recognize in me the fugitive Tatrix of Corcyrus.
Somehow, angrily, I felt rejected.
I realized I had straightened my body beneath their scrutiny.
I wondered why I had done that.
To be sure, the young men who had captured me had not been loath to subject me to lengthy, appreciative scrutinies that would have been more appropriate, I feared, to a slave than a free woman.
But that, however, embarrassing and shameful, had been rather private.
Here I was chained on a platform, my arms over my head, at the side of a public street, where hundreds might, should they care to do so, look upon me unimpeded and at length.
I trusted no one would recognize in me the fugitive Tatrix of Corcyrus.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 17)