Book 33. (7 results) Rebels of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
116
Not vain as are free women, arrogant in their freedom and smug in their supposed beauty, whom slave girls commonly look down on, though fear terribly, but vain as slaves.
8
117
There is a Gorean expression, "slave beautiful," or "beautiful enough to be a slave".
8
118
Even a free woman so described, feigning her outrage, would, I suspect, be secretly pleased with such an assessment.
8
119
What woman would not wish to be 'slave beautiful' or 'beautiful enough to be a slave'? The slave, taken and collared, has no doubt as to her attractiveness and desirability.
8
120
Are such things not proclaimed by the mark on her thigh and the collar on her neck? These are badges of quality, proof that men have found her worthy of bondage, worthy of being put on the block and sold.
8
121
So it is no wonder that the slave is vain, for she knows that she is a prize, that she is so desirable and exciting that men, in the way of nature, will be content with nothing less than her possession.
8
122
And so the girls compete, boast of their prices, and the heat of the bidding which took them from the block.
Not vain as are free women, arrogant in their freedom and smug in their supposed beauty, whom slave girls commonly look down on, though fear terribly, but vain as slaves.
There is a Gorean expression, "slave beautiful," or "beautiful enough to be a slave".
Even a free woman so described, feigning her outrage, would, I suspect, be secretly pleased with such an assessment.
What woman would not wish to be 'slave beautiful' or 'beautiful enough to be a slave'? The slave, taken and collared, has no doubt as to her attractiveness and desirability.
Are such things not proclaimed by the mark on her thigh and the collar on her neck? These are badges of quality, proof that men have found her worthy of bondage, worthy of being put on the block and sold.
So it is no wonder that the slave is vain, for she knows that she is a prize, that she is so desirable and exciting that men, in the way of nature, will be content with nothing less than her possession.
And so the girls compete, boast of their prices, and the heat of the bidding which took them from the block.
- (Rebels of Gor, Chapter )