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Book 10. (1 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Individual Quote)

That the alcoves lock, as well as the doors to the general area, provides the masters with useful options, putting the girls more at their mercy. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 14, Sentence #386)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 386 That the alcoves lock, as well as the doors to the general area, provides the masters with useful options, putting the girls more at their mercy.

Book 10. (7 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 383 In the alcove the girl is commanded to her stomach, head to the back wall, and the small, square gate is locked behind her.
14 384 These two precautions, the prone posture and the locking gate, are common in female seraglios in the Tahari.
14 385 When the girl lies on her stomach, her head to the rear wall, she cannot prevent the door from locking behind her.
14 386 That the alcoves lock, as well as the doors to the general area, provides the masters with useful options, putting the girls more at their mercy.
14 387 Sometimes, for one reason or another, it is useful to separate or isolate given girls; too, it common to secure slaves at night, and the alcove makes this a simple matter; a single guard, with a lamp, can check a hundred girls in a few Ehn; too, if one is not in her place, it is easy to know instantly which one is missing; too, the simple fact of being secured, at the pleasure of men, in whatever way, helps to impress upon slaves their helplessness, and their bondage.
14 388 Furthermore, the small opening, approximately eighteen inches square, and set some ten inches off the floor, in the bars, with its small, heavy gate, can be easily negotiated only on the hands and knees.
14 389 A girl cannot dart from a typical Tahari female-slave alcove.
In the alcove the girl is commanded to her stomach, head to the back wall, and the small, square gate is locked behind her. These two precautions, the prone posture and the locking gate, are common in female seraglios in the Tahari. When the girl lies on her stomach, her head to the rear wall, she cannot prevent the door from locking behind her. That the alcoves lock, as well as the doors to the general area, provides the masters with useful options, putting the girls more at their mercy. Sometimes, for one reason or another, it is useful to separate or isolate given girls; too, it common to secure slaves at night, and the alcove makes this a simple matter; a single guard, with a lamp, can check a hundred girls in a few Ehn; too, if one is not in her place, it is easy to know instantly which one is missing; too, the simple fact of being secured, at the pleasure of men, in whatever way, helps to impress upon slaves their helplessness, and their bondage. Furthermore, the small opening, approximately eighteen inches square, and set some ten inches off the floor, in the bars, with its small, heavy gate, can be easily negotiated only on the hands and knees. A girl cannot dart from a typical Tahari female-slave alcove. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 14)