Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
79
225
The free woman at such entertainments, too, will usually have her customs and preferences.
The free woman at such entertainments, too, will usually have her customs and preferences.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 79, Sentence #225)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
79
222
Too, the collar must always be visible to free women, for they like to see collars on slaves.
79
223
On such occasions, too, of course, if free women are present, the slave, even if she is her master's pleasure slave, will kneel with her knees modestly closed.
79
224
Indeed, to look upon her there, so quiet, so decorous and demure, one would scarcely guess what she is like, stripped and chained, begging, at the foot of her master's couch.
79
225
The free woman at such entertainments, too, will usually have her customs and preferences.
79
226
A common custom is to scarcely notice the slave, and have her serve, in so far as possible, almost as though she did not exist.
79
227
And the free woman will often prefer to have the serving slaves be women obtained from some enemy city.
79
228
This assures them of the nature of such women, that they are worthy only of wearing collars and serving their betters, and, thus, in the same way, in this, they find, inversely, evidence of their own incomparable worth and innate superiority.
Too, the collar must always be visible to free women, for they like to see collars on slaves.
On such occasions, too, of course, if free women are present, the slave, even if she is her master's pleasure slave, will kneel with her knees modestly closed.
Indeed, to look upon her there, so quiet, so decorous and demure, one would scarcely guess what she is like, stripped and chained, begging, at the foot of her master's couch.
The free woman at such entertainments, too, will usually have her customs and preferences.
A common custom is to scarcely notice the slave, and have her serve, in so far as possible, almost as though she did not exist.
And the free woman will often prefer to have the serving slaves be women obtained from some enemy city.
This assures them of the nature of such women, that they are worthy only of wearing collars and serving their betters, and, thus, in the same way, in this, they find, inversely, evidence of their own incomparable worth and innate superiority.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 79)