Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
548
Perhaps a set of measurements, her own, is slipped beneath her door, interestingly pertaining in particular to her wrists, ankles, and throat, or perhaps, even more obviously, she is sent a tunic in the mail, a slave tunic.
Perhaps a set of measurements, her own, is slipped beneath her door, interestingly pertaining in particular to her wrists, ankles, and throat, or perhaps, even more obviously, she is sent a tunic in the mail, a slave tunic.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #548)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
545
To be sure, she must be intelligent, beautiful, healthy, and so on, or she will be ignored.
1
546
Too, as would be expected, she must also be the sort who can be easily made the writhing, helpless victim of her profound, if initially suppressed, sexual needs.
1
547
Such a quarry, at first, usually, misinterprets the clues she is given, however obvious they may be, with respect to the network of plans within which she is already enmeshed.
1
548
Perhaps a set of measurements, her own, is slipped beneath her door, interestingly pertaining in particular to her wrists, ankles, and throat, or perhaps, even more obviously, she is sent a tunic in the mail, a slave tunic.
1
549
To be sure, at that time she understands it only as a brief, revealing garment.
1
550
Perhaps she dares to don it secretly, and then, startled at how she appears in it, and flushing with embarrassing, unaccustomed heat, she hides it away.
1
551
To be sure, it may later be thrown against her body.
To be sure, she must be intelligent, beautiful, healthy, and so on, or she will be ignored.
Too, as would be expected, she must also be the sort who can be easily made the writhing, helpless victim of her profound, if initially suppressed, sexual needs.
Such a quarry, at first, usually, misinterprets the clues she is given, however obvious they may be, with respect to the network of plans within which she is already enmeshed.
Perhaps a set of measurements, her own, is slipped beneath her door, interestingly pertaining in particular to her wrists, ankles, and throat, or perhaps, even more obviously, she is sent a tunic in the mail, a slave tunic.
To be sure, at that time she understands it only as a brief, revealing garment.
Perhaps she dares to don it secretly, and then, startled at how she appears in it, and flushing with embarrassing, unaccustomed heat, she hides it away.
To be sure, it may later be thrown against her body.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1)