Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
21
208
If these were sobering thoughts, the girls, oblivious of such considerations, and with all the innocence of the lovely, curvaceous animals they were, laughed and chatted, and sported about in the water, splashing and playing, the heat and dust of the march put now behind them.
If these were sobering thoughts, the girls, oblivious of such considerations, and with all the innocence of the lovely, curvaceous animals they were, laughed and chatted, and sported about in the water, splashing and playing, the heat and dust of the march put now behind them.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 21, Sentence #208)
Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
21
205
Naturally their owner, the state of Cos, would wish them to be exhibited at their best, to be clean, healthy, rested, presentable, attractive.
21
206
It would wish to enhance their sales value.
21
207
It would want them to be appealing, attractive items of merchandise when it came time to offer them to buyers.
21
208
If these were sobering thoughts, the girls, oblivious of such considerations, and with all the innocence of the lovely, curvaceous animals they were, laughed and chatted, and sported about in the water, splashing and playing, the heat and dust of the march put now behind them.
21
209
Ellen, bending down, rinsed and washed her hair as best she could.
21
210
In a few moments she feared they must leave the water, to apply the cleansing oils, thence to scrape them from the body, with the strigil-like pebbles, after which they would re-enter the water to rinse once more.
21
211
After that they would emerge and dry themselves with the towels, and then apply the soothing and fragrant lotions.
Naturally their owner, the state of Cos, would wish them to be exhibited at their best, to be clean, healthy, rested, presentable, attractive.
It would wish to enhance their sales value.
It would want them to be appealing, attractive items of merchandise when it came time to offer them to buyers.
If these were sobering thoughts, the girls, oblivious of such considerations, and with all the innocence of the lovely, curvaceous animals they were, laughed and chatted, and sported about in the water, splashing and playing, the heat and dust of the march put now behind them.
Ellen, bending down, rinsed and washed her hair as best she could.
In a few moments she feared they must leave the water, to apply the cleansing oils, thence to scrape them from the body, with the strigil-like pebbles, after which they would re-enter the water to rinse once more.
After that they would emerge and dry themselves with the towels, and then apply the soothing and fragrant lotions.
- (Prize of Gor, Chapter 21)