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Book 15. (1 results) Rogue of Gor (Individual Quote)

But free men, I knew, were often too simple or ignorant to gather up the unclaimed booty which might lie about them, even though such booty might beg piteously to serve, and to be taken into their homes, to be treasured. - (Rogue of Gor, Chapter 30, Sentence #25)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
30 25 But free men, I knew, were often too simple or ignorant to gather up the unclaimed booty which might lie about them, even though such booty might beg piteously to serve, and to be taken into their homes, to be treasured.

Book 15. (7 results) Rogue of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
30 22 She kissed well.
30 23 I saw that she belonged in a collar.
30 24 It was too bad, I thought, that that discovery had first been made by pirates and not by strong free men, before whom pirates might quail.
30 25 But free men, I knew, were often too simple or ignorant to gather up the unclaimed booty which might lie about them, even though such booty might beg piteously to serve, and to be taken into their homes, to be treasured.
30 26 It is not easy always, of course, to recognize a slave who wears the robes and veils of concealment; the identification becomes simple, of course, once she has been put in a collar and slave tunic.
30 27 It is said on Gor that the garments of a free woman are designed to conceal a woman's slavery, whereas the accouterments and garments of a slave, such as the brand and collar, the tunic or Ta-Teera, are made to reveal it.
30 28 "You are Jason, of Victoria, are you not?" inquired Policrates.
She kissed well. I saw that she belonged in a collar. It was too bad, I thought, that that discovery had first been made by pirates and not by strong free men, before whom pirates might quail. But free men, I knew, were often too simple or ignorant to gather up the unclaimed booty which might lie about them, even though such booty might beg piteously to serve, and to be taken into their homes, to be treasured. It is not easy always, of course, to recognize a slave who wears the robes and veils of concealment; the identification becomes simple, of course, once she has been put in a collar and slave tunic. It is said on Gor that the garments of a free woman are designed to conceal a woman's slavery, whereas the accouterments and garments of a slave, such as the brand and collar, the tunic or Ta-Teera, are made to reveal it. "You are Jason, of Victoria, are you not?" inquired Policrates. - (Rogue of Gor, Chapter 30)