Book 32. (7 results) Smugglers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
9
198
A line of slaves, perhaps twenty, with ropes and poles, emerged from the forest.
9
199
They were not cofifled.
9
200
And they were, I was pleased to note, tunicked.
9
201
It is said that a free woman might perish of shame if placed in a slave tunic, but, to a slave, such a garment, which she knows need not be accorded to her, may be a treasure, more precious to her than some assemblage of robes and veils to a free woman.
9
202
Indeed, amongst slaves a tunic, in its way, constitutes a symbol of status.
9
203
Certainly tunicked slaves commonly look down upon naked slaves.
9
204
Whereas a slave might prefer to be naked before her master, that she might know herself the more his slave, almost any slave wishes to be clothed in public.
A line of slaves, perhaps twenty, with ropes and poles, emerged from the forest.
They were not cofifled.
And they were, I was pleased to note, tunicked.
It is said that a free woman might perish of shame if placed in a slave tunic, but, to a slave, such a garment, which she knows need not be accorded to her, may be a treasure, more precious to her than some assemblage of robes and veils to a free woman.
Indeed, amongst slaves a tunic, in its way, constitutes a symbol of status.
Certainly tunicked slaves commonly look down upon naked slaves.
Whereas a slave might prefer to be naked before her master, that she might know herself the more his slave, almost any slave wishes to be clothed in public.
- (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter )