Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
819
Too, to be sure, cosmetics, even slave cosmetics, were not free, but cost their coins.
Too, to be sure, cosmetics, even slave cosmetics, were not free, but cost their coins.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 17, Sentence #819)
Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
816
Her hair was soaked, and it clung about her forehead and throat.
17
817
Had Targo's women been permitted slave cosmetics, they would have run about their lips and eyes, and stained the shelf.
17
818
But Targo seldom wasted slave cosmetics on his properties, claiming the honesty of his wares, and the right of a buyer to understand clearly, and in all respects, the exact nature, pure, raw and simple, of the goods he proffered.
17
819
Too, to be sure, cosmetics, even slave cosmetics, were not free, but cost their coins.
17
820
Ellen would later learn that slave girls would fight for a lipstick or an eye shadow, that they might enhance their beauty and prove more pleasing to masters.
17
821
Too, Ellen would learn later that slaves were sometimes tied outside, exposed in cruel weather, that they might learn to better appreciate the warmth of a fire, the significance of a blanket, the snugness of a place at the foot of the master's couch.
17
822
What am I, she wondered.
Her hair was soaked, and it clung about her forehead and throat.
Had Targo's women been permitted slave cosmetics, they would have run about their lips and eyes, and stained the shelf.
But Targo seldom wasted slave cosmetics on his properties, claiming the honesty of his wares, and the right of a buyer to understand clearly, and in all respects, the exact nature, pure, raw and simple, of the goods he proffered.
Too, to be sure, cosmetics, even slave cosmetics, were not free, but cost their coins.
Ellen would later learn that slave girls would fight for a lipstick or an eye shadow, that they might enhance their beauty and prove more pleasing to masters.
Too, Ellen would learn later that slaves were sometimes tied outside, exposed in cruel weather, that they might learn to better appreciate the warmth of a fire, the significance of a blanket, the snugness of a place at the foot of the master's couch.
What am I, she wondered.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 17)