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"money "

Book 4. (1 results) Nomads of Gor (Individual Quote)

I might, of course, if I could find the money, buy her myself and attempt to find her a kind master. - (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 12, Sentence #499)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
12 499 I might, of course, if I could find the money, buy her myself and attempt to find her a kind master.

Book 4. (7 results) Nomads of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
12 496 To be sure, having seen Kamchak with his Aphris, it did not seem to me that either of these possibilities were actually unlikely.
12 497 Elizabeth had reason to fear.
12 498 I might, of course, and would, encourage Kamchak to sell her to a good master, but Kamchak, cooperative to a point, would undoubtedly have his eye fixed most decisively on the price to be obtained.
12 499 I might, of course, if I could find the money, buy her myself and attempt to find her a kind master.
12 500 I thought perhaps Conrad of the Kassars might be a just master.
12 501 He had, however, I knew, recently won a Turian girl in the games.
12 502 Moreover, not every man wants to own an untrained barbarian slave, for such, even if given to them, must be fed—and, this spring, as I could tell from walking about the camp, there was no shortage of girls, freshly collared and branded perhaps, untrained perhaps, but yet, and most importantly, Gorean, which—most significantly—Elizabeth Cardwell was not, and in my opinion could never be.
To be sure, having seen Kamchak with his Aphris, it did not seem to me that either of these possibilities were actually unlikely. Elizabeth had reason to fear. I might, of course, and would, encourage Kamchak to sell her to a good master, but Kamchak, cooperative to a point, would undoubtedly have his eye fixed most decisively on the price to be obtained. I might, of course, if I could find the money, buy her myself and attempt to find her a kind master. I thought perhaps Conrad of the Kassars might be a just master. He had, however, I knew, recently won a Turian girl in the games. Moreover, not every man wants to own an untrained barbarian slave, for such, even if given to them, must be fed—and, this spring, as I could tell from walking about the camp, there was no shortage of girls, freshly collared and branded perhaps, untrained perhaps, but yet, and most importantly, Gorean, which—most significantly—Elizabeth Cardwell was not, and in my opinion could never be. - (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 12)