• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"slave " "sister "

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 690 "The individuals in these communities are bound to the soil and owned collectively by the tribes within whose lands they are permitted to live.
14 691 They grow produce for their masters, such as wagmeza and wagmu, maize, or corn, and such things as pumpkins and squash.
14 692 They are also to furnish labor when required and may be drawn upon, at the whim of their masters, for individual slaves.
14 693 When one is taken from the enclosure one ceases to be Waniyanpi and becomes a common slave, an ordinary slave, one owned by an individual master.
14 694 Usually daughters are taken, for the red masters find them pleasing as slaves, but sometimes, too, young men are taken.
14 695 The word 'Waniyanpi' itself means literally 'tame cattle'.
14 696 It is an expression applied to the collectively owned slaves in these tiny agricultural communities.
"The individuals in these communities are bound to the soil and owned collectively by the tribes within whose lands they are permitted to live. They grow produce for their masters, such as wagmeza and wagmu, maize, or corn, and such things as pumpkins and squash. They are also to furnish labor when required and may be drawn upon, at the whim of their masters, for individual slaves. When one is taken from the enclosure one ceases to be Waniyanpi and becomes a common slave, an ordinary slave, one owned by an individual master. Usually daughters are taken, for the red masters find them pleasing as slaves, but sometimes, too, young men are taken. The word 'Waniyanpi' itself means literally 'tame cattle'. It is an expression applied to the collectively owned slaves in these tiny agricultural communities. - (Savages of Gor, Chapter )