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"custody "

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

Such details are not only useful in discouraging a foolish girl from even thinking of escape, perhaps by lowering herself with knotted covers to the cruel desert below, where she would be almost sure to die, or be shortly recaptured, crazed and thirsting, but, I suspect, are even more useful in tacitly reminding the more intelligent, lovely, well-curved female beasts within of the severe and uncompromising custody in which, reassuringly, they find themselves. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 24, Sentence #56)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
24 56 Such details are not only useful in discouraging a foolish girl from even thinking of escape, perhaps by lowering herself with knotted covers to the cruel desert below, where she would be almost sure to die, or be shortly recaptured, crazed and thirsting, but, I suspect, are even more useful in tacitly reminding the more intelligent, lovely, well-curved female beasts within of the severe and uncompromising custody in which, reassuringly, they find themselves.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
24 53 There was even a small window, though it was barred.
24 54 That it was barred was suitable.
24 55 The quarters were those of a slave.
24 56 Such details are not only useful in discouraging a foolish girl from even thinking of escape, perhaps by lowering herself with knotted covers to the cruel desert below, where she would be almost sure to die, or be shortly recaptured, crazed and thirsting, but, I suspect, are even more useful in tacitly reminding the more intelligent, lovely, well-curved female beasts within of the severe and uncompromising custody in which, reassuringly, they find themselves.
24 57 Bars on a window, a coiled chain, a bowl on the floor, such things, all, have their auspicious, comforting psychological effects upon a beauty.
24 58 They all speak their truths to a woman.
24 59 They remind her of the fundamental truth of her being, that she is owned, that she is slave.
There was even a small window, though it was barred. That it was barred was suitable. The quarters were those of a slave. Such details are not only useful in discouraging a foolish girl from even thinking of escape, perhaps by lowering herself with knotted covers to the cruel desert below, where she would be almost sure to die, or be shortly recaptured, crazed and thirsting, but, I suspect, are even more useful in tacitly reminding the more intelligent, lovely, well-curved female beasts within of the severe and uncompromising custody in which, reassuringly, they find themselves. Bars on a window, a coiled chain, a bowl on the floor, such things, all, have their auspicious, comforting psychological effects upon a beauty. They all speak their truths to a woman. They remind her of the fundamental truth of her being, that she is owned, that she is slave. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 24)