Book 17. (1 results) Savages of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
28
To be sure, a girl who is once sold off a side block may, in time, her femininity blossoming under the discipline of the whip and the harsh tutelage of masters, become a treasure, a slave so beautiful and desirable that men will pay fortunes to have her at their feet.
To be sure, a girl who is once sold off a side block may, in time, her femininity blossoming under the discipline of the whip and the harsh tutelage of masters, become a treasure, a slave so beautiful and desirable that men will pay fortunes to have her at their feet.
- (Savages of Gor, Chapter 8, Sentence #28)
Book 17. (7 results) Savages of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
25
"Side-block girl," in the argot of the slave girl, like "pot girl" and "kettle-and-mat girl," is a term of disparagement.
8
26
It must be admitted there is more prestige in being auctioned from a major, or central, block than there is in being casually purchased from a side block.
8
27
One might as well be sold off a slaver's public shelf, in a city, or out of a cage, or kneeling in the mud outside a village, from a "slaver's necklace".
8
28
To be sure, a girl who is once sold off a side block may, in time, her femininity blossoming under the discipline of the whip and the harsh tutelage of masters, become a treasure, a slave so beautiful and desirable that men will pay fortunes to have her at their feet.
8
29
I wandered over to the left wall to look at some of the side blocks.
8
30
"I shall take this one," I heard a fellow say, and so simply was the girl sold.
8
31
She was one of the few girls on whom Ram Seibar had set a fixed price.
"Side-block girl," in the argot of the slave girl, like "pot girl" and "kettle-and-mat girl," is a term of disparagement.
It must be admitted there is more prestige in being auctioned from a major, or central, block than there is in being casually purchased from a side block.
One might as well be sold off a slaver's public shelf, in a city, or out of a cage, or kneeling in the mud outside a village, from a "slaver's necklace".
To be sure, a girl who is once sold off a side block may, in time, her femininity blossoming under the discipline of the whip and the harsh tutelage of masters, become a treasure, a slave so beautiful and desirable that men will pay fortunes to have her at their feet.
I wandered over to the left wall to look at some of the side blocks.
"I shall take this one," I heard a fellow say, and so simply was the girl sold.
She was one of the few girls on whom Ram Seibar had set a fixed price.
- (Savages of Gor, Chapter 8)