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

This is in accord with their status as domestic animals, and, too, it enables their slightest, most fleeting expressions to be read by their masters. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 21, Sentence #1076)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 1076 This is in accord with their status as domestic animals, and, too, it enables their slightest, most fleeting expressions to be read by their masters.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
21 1073 "Be it only a camisk or slave strip!" "Perhaps you would like veils, and robes of concealment," said Calliodorus.
21 1074 "We dare not veil our features, Master," said Publia, "for we are slaves".
21 1075 The faces of slaves are to be kept bared.
21 1076 This is in accord with their status as domestic animals, and, too, it enables their slightest, most fleeting expressions to be read by their masters.
21 1077 Too, of course, it is pleasant to look upon the beauty of a woman's bared features, particularly when she understand clearly that she is not permitted to conceal them.
21 1078 Many Earth girls who never gave a thought to veiling on their native world become quite sensitive to it when brought to Gor.
21 1079 On Gor, as slaves, not permitted the veil, they often, early in their bondage, long for veiling, not only because of the now-invidious comparison between their own bared features and those of modestly veiled free women, the differences in dignity, prestige, and such, but because they are overwhelmingly and dismayingly aware of the lustful pleasure with which their delicate, feminine features, so different from those of a man, are regarded by Gorean males.
"Be it only a camisk or slave strip!" "Perhaps you would like veils, and robes of concealment," said Calliodorus. "We dare not veil our features, Master," said Publia, "for we are slaves". The faces of slaves are to be kept bared. This is in accord with their status as domestic animals, and, too, it enables their slightest, most fleeting expressions to be read by their masters. Too, of course, it is pleasant to look upon the beauty of a woman's bared features, particularly when she understand clearly that she is not permitted to conceal them. Many Earth girls who never gave a thought to veiling on their native world become quite sensitive to it when brought to Gor. On Gor, as slaves, not permitted the veil, they often, early in their bondage, long for veiling, not only because of the now-invidious comparison between their own bared features and those of modestly veiled free women, the differences in dignity, prestige, and such, but because they are overwhelmingly and dismayingly aware of the lustful pleasure with which their delicate, feminine features, so different from those of a man, are regarded by Gorean males. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 21)