Book 24. (7 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
36
53
"These things are much different," she said.
36
54
"How?" I asked.
36
55
"As a free captive," she said, "it is appropriate that I wear slave strips or, say, a ta-teera.
36
56
Thus might my captor amuse and delight himself, and shame and reveal me, and people might look upon me and say, 'What a beautiful, exposed captive! Perhaps she was of high caste, and now look at her.
36
57
She is now in, say, a ta-teera,' or if I were a slave it would quite appropriate for me, too, to wear such things, and I would delight in them, that even so much was granted me, and I, a lowly slave, would not dare to aspire to more!" "Yes?" I said.
36
58
"But as a free woman of high caste," she exclaimed, "to be put in the garment of a free woman of low caste is unthinkable!" "I see your point," I said.
36
59
She flung the garment angrily down.
"These things are much different," she said.
"How?" I asked.
"As a free captive," she said, "it is appropriate that I wear slave strips or, say, a ta-teera.
Thus might my captor amuse and delight himself, and shame and reveal me, and people might look upon me and say, 'What a beautiful, exposed captive! Perhaps she was of high caste, and now look at her.
She is now in, say, a ta-teera,' or if I were a slave it would quite appropriate for me, too, to wear such things, and I would delight in them, that even so much was granted me, and I, a lowly slave, would not dare to aspire to more!" "Yes?" I said.
"But as a free woman of high caste," she exclaimed, "to be put in the garment of a free woman of low caste is unthinkable!" "I see your point," I said.
She flung the garment angrily down.
- (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter )