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Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)

"Yes," she said, "I am a slave!" Denial of the veil is one of the things, as noted, insisted upon by free women for the slave, this marking another dramatic difference between them, at least between those of high caste and the slave. - (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 8, Sentence #375)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 375 "Yes," she said, "I am a slave!" Denial of the veil is one of the things, as noted, insisted upon by free women for the slave, this marking another dramatic difference between them, at least between those of high caste and the slave.

Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 372 How beautiful and distraught she looked! How this puts them so much the more where they belong, in our power! "You may not hide yourselves," I said.
8 373 Her eyes were bright with tears, some coursed down her cheeks, running under the fur.
8 374 "You are a slave," I said.
8 375 "Yes," she said, "I am a slave!" Denial of the veil is one of the things, as noted, insisted upon by free women for the slave, this marking another dramatic difference between them, at least between those of high caste and the slave.
8 376 Low-caste women, in their work, not unoften do without veiling.
8 377 Good-looking girls of low-caste sometimes go about unveiled deliberately, hoping that they may catch the eye of a slaver, and perhaps be sold into a high household, or come into the chains of a handsome, well-to-do master.
8 378 One of the most delightful vengeances of a free woman upon a rival is to have her rival reduced to slavery, and then have her at her feet, tunicked, and face-stripped, as a serving slave, perhaps to be later sold, out of the city.
How beautiful and distraught she looked! How this puts them so much the more where they belong, in our power! "You may not hide yourselves," I said. Her eyes were bright with tears, some coursed down her cheeks, running under the fur. "You are a slave," I said. "Yes," she said, "I am a slave!" Denial of the veil is one of the things, as noted, insisted upon by free women for the slave, this marking another dramatic difference between them, at least between those of high caste and the slave. Low-caste women, in their work, not unoften do without veiling. Good-looking girls of low-caste sometimes go about unveiled deliberately, hoping that they may catch the eye of a slaver, and perhaps be sold into a high household, or come into the chains of a handsome, well-to-do master. One of the most delightful vengeances of a free woman upon a rival is to have her rival reduced to slavery, and then have her at her feet, tunicked, and face-stripped, as a serving slave, perhaps to be later sold, out of the city. - (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 8)