Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
15
1
How kaissa Came to the Forest There is no mistaking the sound of slave bells.
How Kaissa Came to the Forest There is no mistaking the sound of slave bells.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 15, Sentence #1)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
43
Too, he might have hoped that after a suitable interval his colleagues' work might prove unnecessary, for Cabot might in the meantime have succumbed to other terrors of the forest, presumably wild beasts of one sort or another, perhaps even to those dangerous prey animals of his own species.
14
44
The watch was changed twice before Cabot fell asleep.
14
45
When he awakened, Tula and Lana were gone.
15
1
How kaissa Came to the Forest There is no mistaking the sound of slave bells.
15
2
But these were not the proportioned janglings of such bells, measured to the step of a slave who well knows their effect on men, and uses them to present the slave of her.
15
3
Just as women of one world may use attire, perfume, cosmetics, and such, or another robes, and sandals, and veils, to call attention, while haughtily pretending not to do so, to the flesh she is offering to a man, or the slave she is dangling before him, so a slave, who is owned, may use her bells variously, perhaps their sudden flash and sparkle to announce her presence in a room, perhaps their provocative and subtle whispering to accompany her labors, see me, Master, I am yours, perhaps that insolent jangle on the street which is unmistakably a brazen and proud proclamation of her bondage, that she has been found suitable for belling, perhaps that tiny sound, and moan, at the foot of her master's couch, which calls attention to her need.
15
4
She hopes she will not be cuffed.
Too, he might have hoped that after a suitable interval his colleagues' work might prove unnecessary, for Cabot might in the meantime have succumbed to other terrors of the forest, presumably wild beasts of one sort or another, perhaps even to those dangerous prey animals of his own species.
The watch was changed twice before Cabot fell asleep.
When he awakened, Tula and Lana were gone.
How kaissa Came to the Forest There is no mistaking the sound of slave bells.
But these were not the proportioned janglings of such bells, measured to the step of a slave who well knows their effect on men, and uses them to present the slave of her.
Just as women of one world may use attire, perfume, cosmetics, and such, or another robes, and sandals, and veils, to call attention, while haughtily pretending not to do so, to the flesh she is offering to a man, or the slave she is dangling before him, so a slave, who is owned, may use her bells variously, perhaps their sudden flash and sparkle to announce her presence in a room, perhaps their provocative and subtle whispering to accompany her labors, see me, Master, I am yours, perhaps that insolent jangle on the street which is unmistakably a brazen and proud proclamation of her bondage, that she has been found suitable for belling, perhaps that tiny sound, and moan, at the foot of her master's couch, which calls attention to her need.
She hopes she will not be cuffed.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 15)