Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
267
Fashions, too, can change, for example, in the color of grasses favored in pleasure gardens, the hair and eye color of its slaves, and so on.
Fashions, too, can change, for example, in the color of grasses favored in pleasure gardens, the hair and eye color of its slaves, and so on.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #267)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
264
A well-stocked pleasure garden is doubtless pleasant for the master but it is likely to be less pleasant for its inmates, given the boredom, the intrigues, the competitions, the tense, shifting alliances, and such.
2
265
Too, such gardens are often little more than a vanity amongst rich Goreans, as might be, say, the well-kept gardens surrounding a villa or estate.
2
266
Wealthy Goreans not unoften strive to rival one another in such matters, as they might in dwellings, stables, walks, parks, and colonnades, in hunting sleen, racing tharlarion, aviaries, art collections, pools, and such.
2
267
Fashions, too, can change, for example, in the color of grasses favored in pleasure gardens, the hair and eye color of its slaves, and so on.
2
268
In any event, Miss Pym was under no delusion as to her own attractiveness.
2
269
Indeed, she probably overestimated it, somewhat, as she had never had any experience of the relevant markets, nor any understanding of how her beauty might rank with that of others, many of them doubtless her superiors.
2
270
The markets, of course, sort out the beauty of women, on a monetary scale, according to what men are willing to pay for it.
A well-stocked pleasure garden is doubtless pleasant for the master but it is likely to be less pleasant for its inmates, given the boredom, the intrigues, the competitions, the tense, shifting alliances, and such.
Too, such gardens are often little more than a vanity amongst rich Goreans, as might be, say, the well-kept gardens surrounding a villa or estate.
Wealthy Goreans not unoften strive to rival one another in such matters, as they might in dwellings, stables, walks, parks, and colonnades, in hunting sleen, racing tharlarion, aviaries, art collections, pools, and such.
Fashions, too, can change, for example, in the color of grasses favored in pleasure gardens, the hair and eye color of its slaves, and so on.
In any event, Miss Pym was under no delusion as to her own attractiveness.
Indeed, she probably overestimated it, somewhat, as she had never had any experience of the relevant markets, nor any understanding of how her beauty might rank with that of others, many of them doubtless her superiors.
The markets, of course, sort out the beauty of women, on a monetary scale, according to what men are willing to pay for it.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 2)