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"collar "

Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)

Many a woman, in effect, was dragged upward, from the collar to the coronet, and in the master's bed were never permitted to forget the collar". - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 29, Sentence #107)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
29 107 Many a woman, in effect, was dragged upward, from the collar to the coronet, and in the master's bed were never permitted to forget the collar".

Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
29 104 Few would have been accounted slaves, perhaps, but that was, in effect, what they were, the lovely daughter of a peasant, sold for sheep, the orphaned beauty put to work in the stables, the pretty domestic servant summonable to the manor's lord's bed, and such, and, earlier, thousands of beauties sold in the markets of Roman Britain, and such.
29 105 Women have always, in effect, been goods, of one sort or another, and men have always appropriated beauty.
29 106 Do not doubt that many women in aristocratic lines once thrashed in the straw of stables, moaned in closets, obeyed in kitchens, and such.
29 107 Many a woman, in effect, was dragged upward, from the collar to the coronet, and in the master's bed were never permitted to forget the collar".
29 108 "All were such women?" she asked.
29 109 "Certainly not all," he said.
29 110 "And many of these women, perhaps the less beautiful, were not taken into families, but merely thrown a coin, or cast aside".
Few would have been accounted slaves, perhaps, but that was, in effect, what they were, the lovely daughter of a peasant, sold for sheep, the orphaned beauty put to work in the stables, the pretty domestic servant summonable to the manor's lord's bed, and such, and, earlier, thousands of beauties sold in the markets of Roman Britain, and such. Women have always, in effect, been goods, of one sort or another, and men have always appropriated beauty. Do not doubt that many women in aristocratic lines once thrashed in the straw of stables, moaned in closets, obeyed in kitchens, and such. Many a woman, in effect, was dragged upward, from the collar to the coronet, and in the master's bed were never permitted to forget the collar". "All were such women?" she asked. "Certainly not all," he said. "And many of these women, perhaps the less beautiful, were not taken into families, but merely thrown a coin, or cast aside". - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 29)