• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"slave " "wine "

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 598 "I see," I said.
14 599 I myself prefer the application of such expressions not to slaves, but to pretentious free women, to remind them that they, in spite of their freedom, are only women.
14 600 They are useful, by the way, in making a free woman uneasy, their use suggesting to her that perhaps the male is considering shortly enslaving her.
14 601 In speaking to a slave I prefer expressions such as 'slave' or 'slave Girl', or the girl's name itself, she understanding clearly, of course, that it is only a slave name.
14 602 "And what did you call him?" I asked.
14 603 "'Wicayuhe', 'Itancanka'," she said, "words which mean 'Master'".
14 604 "I thought so," I said.
"I see," I said. I myself prefer the application of such expressions not to slaves, but to pretentious free women, to remind them that they, in spite of their freedom, are only women. They are useful, by the way, in making a free woman uneasy, their use suggesting to her that perhaps the male is considering shortly enslaving her. In speaking to a slave I prefer expressions such as 'slave' or 'slave Girl', or the girl's name itself, she understanding clearly, of course, that it is only a slave name. "And what did you call him?" I asked. "'Wicayuhe', 'Itancanka'," she said, "words which mean 'Master'". "I thought so," I said. - (Savages of Gor, Chapter )