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"brand "

Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)

Too, of course, the brand and the slave collar, with their profound meanings, on a number of levels, muchly enhance the beauty of a woman. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 5, Sentence #70)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
5 70 Too, of course, the brand and the slave collar, with their profound meanings, on a number of levels, muchly enhance the beauty of a woman.

Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
5 67 Muchly must she be concerned, too, with matters of couture, so to speak, that is, the arrangements of adornments, the knotting of camisks, the hang of the slave tunic, the subtle, seemingly careless appointments of the ta-teera, the manifold drapings of silk, and such.
5 68 Even her simple house tunics are to be pressed and clean.
5 69 She, as a slave, and thus owned by another, is not permitted the inestimable privilege of being disgusting.
5 70 Too, of course, the brand and the slave collar, with their profound meanings, on a number of levels, muchly enhance the beauty of a woman.
5 71 Perhaps most important, interestingly, is the inward transformation of the girl in bondage, the profound changes which take place within her having to do with her sexual and emotional liberation, the deepening of her mental and emotional attitudes, these things freeing her to be herself, too, the locating of herself in her place in nature, the finding of herself submitted, helpless and obedient, kneeling at the feet of a dominant male, her master, these changes being reflected outwardly in her new being, her rebirth, so to speak, as a human female.
5 72 The thought briefly passed through my mind of so many of the young women of Earth with their confused, ambivalent attitudes toward themselves and men.
5 73 I thought of some of the young women who had been brought to Gor, young women whose attire seemed perhaps modeled on that of fourteen-year-old male siblings.
Muchly must she be concerned, too, with matters of couture, so to speak, that is, the arrangements of adornments, the knotting of camisks, the hang of the slave tunic, the subtle, seemingly careless appointments of the ta-teera, the manifold drapings of silk, and such. Even her simple house tunics are to be pressed and clean. She, as a slave, and thus owned by another, is not permitted the inestimable privilege of being disgusting. Too, of course, the brand and the slave collar, with their profound meanings, on a number of levels, muchly enhance the beauty of a woman. Perhaps most important, interestingly, is the inward transformation of the girl in bondage, the profound changes which take place within her having to do with her sexual and emotional liberation, the deepening of her mental and emotional attitudes, these things freeing her to be herself, too, the locating of herself in her place in nature, the finding of herself submitted, helpless and obedient, kneeling at the feet of a dominant male, her master, these changes being reflected outwardly in her new being, her rebirth, so to speak, as a human female. The thought briefly passed through my mind of so many of the young women of Earth with their confused, ambivalent attitudes toward themselves and men. I thought of some of the young women who had been brought to Gor, young women whose attire seemed perhaps modeled on that of fourteen-year-old male siblings. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 5)