![]() |
Positions Blanket This is a silent command. When a blanket, fur or cloak etc are tossed over a slaves head she must remain silent and motionless until it is removed. I then threw the second blanket, the top blanket over her, covering her completely. When a blanket, or cloak, or covering of any sort, is thrown over a slave like this she may not speak or rise. She must remain as she is, silent, until the master, or some free man, lifts the covering away." Explorers of Gor, page 94 Gorean Bow kneeling with your thighs spread widely the slave leans backwards until her head touches the ground, her hands flat next to her head she lifts her body, arching her back. The girl is now fully exposed for the Master. This is a painful position to be in and cannot be held for long. �Under the torchlight Phyllis Robertson was now on her knees, the Warrior at her side, holding her behind the small of the back. Her head went farther back, as her hands moved on the arms of the Warrior, as though once to press him away, and then again to draw him closer, and her head then touched the furs, her body a cruel, helpless bow in his hands, and then, her head down, it seemed she struggled and her body straightened itself until she lay, save for her head and heels, on his hands clasped behind her back, her arms extended over her head to the fur behind her.�Assassin of Gor, page 186 She sleen when commanded to she sleen, the slave turns her back to the Master and lowers to her knees and elbows, her fingers intertwining around her neck, raising her hips up, her thighs part spaciously as her back arches. She is now totally exposed to Him. Her Master may then beat or take her sexually like an animal. �He knelt me there. "Put your head down, to the floor," he said. "Clasp your hands, firmly, behind the back of your neck." "Yes, Master," I moaned. He was then behind me. He put his hands, under my arms, on my breasts, sweetly and firmly. Then he moved his bands back, caressing my flanks. My head was down. My fingers were together, behind the back of my neck. I was in his collar. It was steel, I could not remove it. I belonged to him. My body hurt, from his whip, that of my master. My head hurt, from my hair, where I had been conducted, unceremoniously, to this location. "Please, Master," I sobbed. "Not like this! Not you, please!" "The slave is pretty," he remarked. "Oh!" I cried. "Oh!" "You have a lovely ass," he said."Ohhh!" I said. "You may thank me," he said. Kajira of Gor, Page 434 Sula laying back on the ground the slave spreads her legs a shoulders width apart. Raising her wrists over her head she crosses them. Keeping her eyes lowered she waits silently for her Masters use. "Sula, Kajira!" said the man. She slid her legs from under her and lay on her back, her hands at her sides, palms up, legs open.� Explorers of Gor, Page 77 Sula ki laying flat on the ground on her back, the slave lays her hands at her sides, palms up and open, her legs are widely spread as she slowly lifts her hips, offering to her Master herself. �Then she lay on her back, her knees drawn up, before me. She arched her back. Her breasts were lifted beautifully. I observed their lovely rise and fall, correlated with the respiratory cycle of her small lungs. Then she lay back, her shoulders in the dirt, and pressing against the earth with her small feet, piteously lifted before me, for my examination, and seizure, if I pleased, the deep belly of her, the sweet cradle of her slave's heat.� Explorers of Gor, Page 329 Usage position kneeling with her thighs spread, the girl lays her head down on the ground, intertwining her fingers behind her neck, she thrust her buttock upward, opened for her Masters use. �He knelt me there. 'Put your head down, to the floor,' he said. 'Clasp your hands, firmly, behind the back of your neck. 'Yes, Master,' I moaned. He was then behind me. He put his hands, under my arms, on my breasts, sweetly and firmly. Then he moved his hands back, caressing my flanks. My head was down, my fingers were together, behind the back of my neck.� Kajira of Gor, Page 434 Foods Cheeses �The Tarn Keeper, who was called by those in the tavern Mip, brought the food, bosk steak and yellow bread, peas and Torian olives, and two golden-brown, starchy Suls, broken open and filled with melted bosk cheese.� Assassin of Gor, page 168 Salts There are several different salts. Red, Yellow, White and Sea salts. Red salt contains ferrous oxide giving it its color. Most popular in Torvaldsland, it comes from the sea water or sea weed. �It had been expected, I gathered, that I would sit at one of the two long side tables, and perhaps even below the bowls of red and yellow salt which divided these tables. The table of Cernus itself, of course, was regarded as being above the bowls.� Assassin of Gor, page 89 � Salt, incidentally, is obtained by the men of Torvaldsland, most commonly, from sea water or the burning of seaweek. It is also, however, a trade commodity, and is sometimes taken in raids. The red and yellow salts of the south, some which I saw on the tables, are not domestic to Torvaldsland." Marauders of Gor, page 186-187 �Most salt at Klima is white, but certain of the mines deliver red salt, red from the ferrous oxide in its composition, which is called the Red Salt of Kasra, after its port of embarkation, at the juncture of the Upper and Lower Fayeen.� Tribesmen of Gor, page 238 Sugars There are 4 different sugars talked of in the books. The only colors mentioned are yellow and white. �There was a brass ladle that Aphris and Elizabeth had used in cooking and a tin box of yellow Turian sugar.� Nomads of Gor, page 23 �With a tiny spoon, its tip no more than a tenth of a hort in diameter, she placed four measures of white sugar, and six of yellow in the cup.� Tribesmen of Gor, page 89 �Lola now returned to the small table and, kneeling head down, served us our desert, slices of topsit, sprinkled with four Gorean sugars.� Rogue of Gor, page 132 Sullage A soup made from suls, tur-pah and roots of the kes shrub. Usually leftover foods are mixed in to give it extra flavor. �First she boiled and simmered a kettle of Sullage, a common Gorean soup consisting of three standard ingredients, and, as it is said, whatever else may be found, saving only the rocks of the field. The principal ingredients of Sullage are the golden Sul, �the curled, red, ovate leaves of the Tur-Pah, a tree parasite,� and the salty, blue secondary roots of the Kes shrub.� Priest Kings of Gor, page 35 Drinks Bazi tea Is a herbal drink that is drank heavily sugared. The bazi tea ceremony is a onlinism and not found in the books. "Tea is extremely important to the nomads. It is served hot and highly sugared. It gives strength then, in virtue of the sugar, and cools them, by making them sweat, as well as stimulating them. It is drunk three small cups at a time, carefully measured." Tribesmen of Gor, p 38 ~smiles~ for this lesson.. you will need to perform the above positions in camp with a trainer..remember you are not performing for the trainer but for your Owner.. using the foods above you are to go to the servery and cook something.. making sure you use at least 3 of the above.. you will post that as your chore for the day.. |