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Book 14. (1 results) Fighting Slave of Gor (Individual Quote)

Their values, of course, as that of other domestic animals, tend to fluctuate with market conditions. - (Fighting Slave of Gor, Chapter 34, Sentence #164)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
34 164 Their values, of course, as that of other domestic animals, tend to fluctuate with market conditions.

Book 14. (7 results) Fighting Slave of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
34 161 Gorean slave girls, on the other hand, do have a significant role in the Gorean economy, rather as domestic animals in general.
34 162 They perform useful labors of many sorts and, given their abundance, most men can afford one or more.
34 163 Whereas the slave is a domestic animal, it is clear, of course, that they are of much greater interest to the average fellow than, say, a verr or tarsk.
34 164 Their values, of course, as that of other domestic animals, tend to fluctuate with market conditions.
34 165 Perhaps of greater interest is the fact that, despite their lack of legal standing, and their strict status as no more than a vendible commodity, no more than a curvaceous, collared property, they are acclaimed and celebrated, and relished and sought after, with gold and leather, with lust and intelligence, with cunning and steel.
34 166 It would probably be hard for a woman of Earth to understand how a mere slave girl, nothing but a commodity in a snatch of silk and a light, lovely, narrow, locked collar, could be so admired and prized.
34 167 The culture of Earth has not prepared its women to understand how delicious, vital, beautiful, desirable and exciting their sex can be.
Gorean slave girls, on the other hand, do have a significant role in the Gorean economy, rather as domestic animals in general. They perform useful labors of many sorts and, given their abundance, most men can afford one or more. Whereas the slave is a domestic animal, it is clear, of course, that they are of much greater interest to the average fellow than, say, a verr or tarsk. Their values, of course, as that of other domestic animals, tend to fluctuate with market conditions. Perhaps of greater interest is the fact that, despite their lack of legal standing, and their strict status as no more than a vendible commodity, no more than a curvaceous, collared property, they are acclaimed and celebrated, and relished and sought after, with gold and leather, with lust and intelligence, with cunning and steel. It would probably be hard for a woman of Earth to understand how a mere slave girl, nothing but a commodity in a snatch of silk and a light, lovely, narrow, locked collar, could be so admired and prized. The culture of Earth has not prepared its women to understand how delicious, vital, beautiful, desirable and exciting their sex can be. - (Fighting Slave of Gor, Chapter 34)