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"bina "

Book 31. (1 results) Conspirators of Gor (Individual Quote)

Interestingly, the Lady Bina was, in many ways, rather different from the typical Gorean free woman. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #296)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 296 Interestingly, the Lady bina was, in many ways, rather different from the typical Gorean free woman.

Book 31. (7 results) Conspirators of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 293 Too, there are rumors that some shorn hair, taken from slaves, is used for wigs and falls, for free women.
10 294 Naturally the hair is certified as having been that of other free women.
10 295 I did not think I was all that unattractive, as long as the kerchief was on me.
10 296 Interestingly, the Lady bina was, in many ways, rather different from the typical Gorean free woman.
10 297 She had observed other free women, with serving slaves, and so she had me heel her, at the proper distance, on the left, appropriately, head down, but she was not at all strict about my looking about, and I frequently did so.
10 298 Might I not be of interest to a master, and might not one or another of the fellows about inquire of the Lady bina, sooner or later, what she might be willing to take for her kerchiefed girl? My tunic was certainly not that of a pleasure slave, a paga girl, or such, or even a tower slave, but, too, it was not as calculatedly concealing as the common tunic of a serving slave.
10 299 On the other hand, I had seen more than one serving slave, in such a tunic, unseen by her mistress, move in such a way that a passing fellow would be in no doubt that within that tunic there was a slave.
Too, there are rumors that some shorn hair, taken from slaves, is used for wigs and falls, for free women. Naturally the hair is certified as having been that of other free women. I did not think I was all that unattractive, as long as the kerchief was on me. Interestingly, the Lady bina was, in many ways, rather different from the typical Gorean free woman. She had observed other free women, with serving slaves, and so she had me heel her, at the proper distance, on the left, appropriately, head down, but she was not at all strict about my looking about, and I frequently did so. Might I not be of interest to a master, and might not one or another of the fellows about inquire of the Lady bina, sooner or later, what she might be willing to take for her kerchiefed girl? My tunic was certainly not that of a pleasure slave, a paga girl, or such, or even a tower slave, but, too, it was not as calculatedly concealing as the common tunic of a serving slave. On the other hand, I had seen more than one serving slave, in such a tunic, unseen by her mistress, move in such a way that a passing fellow would be in no doubt that within that tunic there was a slave. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 10)