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"cosmetics "

Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)

I wonder, she thought, if, in the privacy of their compartments, even free women, with their companions, might resort to cosmetics, perhaps even serving their companions as though they might be no more than slaves, but they would not be, of course, true slaves. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30, Sentence #70)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
30 70 I wonder, she thought, if, in the privacy of their compartments, even free women, with their companions, might resort to cosmetics, perhaps even serving their companions as though they might be no more than slaves, but they would not be, of course, true slaves.

Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
30 67 Perhaps, most simply, it should be thought of as a life of femaleness, of essential femaleness, of complete femaleness.
30 68 If you would be a woman be a slave.
30 69 Ellen thought, again, of cosmetics.
30 70 I wonder, she thought, if, in the privacy of their compartments, even free women, with their companions, might resort to cosmetics, perhaps even serving their companions as though they might be no more than slaves, but they would not be, of course, true slaves.
30 71 Ellen wondered if free women might do such, to keep their companions out of the markets, where they might buy an actual slave, a woman over whom they would genuinely have absolute power, as her master had over her.
30 72 Perhaps a brief cast of irritation then traversed the countenance of Ellen, as she thought of free women.
30 73 Little love is lost betwixt free women and slaves, in either direction.
Perhaps, most simply, it should be thought of as a life of femaleness, of essential femaleness, of complete femaleness. If you would be a woman be a slave. Ellen thought, again, of cosmetics. I wonder, she thought, if, in the privacy of their compartments, even free women, with their companions, might resort to cosmetics, perhaps even serving their companions as though they might be no more than slaves, but they would not be, of course, true slaves. Ellen wondered if free women might do such, to keep their companions out of the markets, where they might buy an actual slave, a woman over whom they would genuinely have absolute power, as her master had over her. Perhaps a brief cast of irritation then traversed the countenance of Ellen, as she thought of free women. Little love is lost betwixt free women and slaves, in either direction. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30)