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Book 17. (1 results) Savages of Gor (Individual Quote)

Who would buy them? The compound also contained several larger and smaller wooden structures, primarily holding and storage areas, barracks for men and various ancillary buildings, a cook house, smithy, discipline shack, and such. - (Savages of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #65)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 65 Who would buy them? The compound also contained several larger and smaller wooden structures, primarily holding and storage areas, barracks for men and various ancillary buildings, a cook house, smithy, discipline shack, and such.

Book 17. (7 results) Savages of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 62 It must indeed be fine stuff, I thought, if it were superior to the girls in the pits for several were extraordinarily attractive.
6 63 It is not surprising, of course, that the quality of beauty in barbarian slaves brought to Gor is quite high.
6 64 If they were not beautiful there would be little point in bringing them to Gor.
6 65 Who would buy them? The compound also contained several larger and smaller wooden structures, primarily holding and storage areas, barracks for men and various ancillary buildings, a cook house, smithy, discipline shack, and such.
6 66 The entire compound is enclosed by a wooden palisade.
6 67 On the largest building, the sales barn, about seventy feet wide and a hundred and twenty feet in length, there flies the pennon of Ram Seibar, a yellow pennon on which, in black, are portrayed shackles and a whip.
6 68 "Do you know Grunt, the trader?" I asked the fellow.
It must indeed be fine stuff, I thought, if it were superior to the girls in the pits for several were extraordinarily attractive. It is not surprising, of course, that the quality of beauty in barbarian slaves brought to Gor is quite high. If they were not beautiful there would be little point in bringing them to Gor. Who would buy them? The compound also contained several larger and smaller wooden structures, primarily holding and storage areas, barracks for men and various ancillary buildings, a cook house, smithy, discipline shack, and such. The entire compound is enclosed by a wooden palisade. On the largest building, the sales barn, about seventy feet wide and a hundred and twenty feet in length, there flies the pennon of Ram Seibar, a yellow pennon on which, in black, are portrayed shackles and a whip. "Do you know Grunt, the trader?" I asked the fellow. - (Savages of Gor, Chapter 6)