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

If a free woman is present, for example, one is scarcely likely to tear the silk from a laughing, squealing slave and rape her on the table. - (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 26, Sentence #55)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
26 55 If a free woman is present, for example, one is scarcely likely to tear the silk from a laughing, squealing slave and rape her on the table.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
26 52 That was a relief for us.
26 53 The frustrations and chilling hatred of free women for their embonded sisters, and their power to inflict pain on them, tended naturally to preclude, or inhibit, the performances of slaves.
26 54 Their presence, too, of course, tended to have an adverse effect on the satisfactions obtainable by the free men present.
26 55 If a free woman is present, for example, one is scarcely likely to tear the silk from a laughing, squealing slave and rape her on the table.
26 56 Female slaves commonly wear relatively modest garments and serve unobtrusively and decorously when free women are present.
26 57 Except for the perfection of their service, and their collars and the relative brevity, openness and looseness of their garments, one might not even know they were slaves, unless perhaps, of course, one looked into their eyes, or touched them.
26 58 "Remember the many things I have told you," said Teela.
That was a relief for us. The frustrations and chilling hatred of free women for their embonded sisters, and their power to inflict pain on them, tended naturally to preclude, or inhibit, the performances of slaves. Their presence, too, of course, tended to have an adverse effect on the satisfactions obtainable by the free men present. If a free woman is present, for example, one is scarcely likely to tear the silk from a laughing, squealing slave and rape her on the table. Female slaves commonly wear relatively modest garments and serve unobtrusively and decorously when free women are present. Except for the perfection of their service, and their collars and the relative brevity, openness and looseness of their garments, one might not even know they were slaves, unless perhaps, of course, one looked into their eyes, or touched them. "Remember the many things I have told you," said Teela. - (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 26)