Book 20. (1 results) Players of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
21
27
On the other hand when the "free woman" finds herself just such an animal, a slave, she finds herself subject to the same objective assessments with which men, keepers and trainers, buyers and sellers, and such, regard all sorts of animals.
On the other hand when the "free woman" finds herself just such an animal, a slave, she finds herself subject to the same objective assessments with which men, keepers and trainers, buyers and sellers, and such, regard all sorts of animals.
- (Players of Gor, Chapter 21, Sentence #27)
Book 20. (7 results) Players of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
21
24
Is it not a relative thing? Free women seldom think to compare their beauty with that of slaves, for the slave is no more than an animal.
21
25
They are not in the same order of consideration, or within the same compass, so to speak.
21
26
The statuses and ranks are so different.
21
27
On the other hand when the "free woman" finds herself just such an animal, a slave, she finds herself subject to the same objective assessments with which men, keepers and trainers, buyers and sellers, and such, regard all sorts of animals.
21
28
Suddenly her beauty is no longer concealed and sacrosanct but subject to explicit display and comparison, and vending.
21
29
I recalled that I had once told the Lady Yanina that there were thousands of slaves more beautiful than she, but she had dismissed this observation on the grounds that it was a pointless irrelevance, as the slaves could be bought and sold.
21
30
But now she, too, could be bought and sold.
Is it not a relative thing? Free women seldom think to compare their beauty with that of slaves, for the slave is no more than an animal.
They are not in the same order of consideration, or within the same compass, so to speak.
The statuses and ranks are so different.
On the other hand when the "free woman" finds herself just such an animal, a slave, she finds herself subject to the same objective assessments with which men, keepers and trainers, buyers and sellers, and such, regard all sorts of animals.
Suddenly her beauty is no longer concealed and sacrosanct but subject to explicit display and comparison, and vending.
I recalled that I had once told the Lady Yanina that there were thousands of slaves more beautiful than she, but she had dismissed this observation on the grounds that it was a pointless irrelevance, as the slaves could be bought and sold.
But now she, too, could be bought and sold.
- (Players of Gor, Chapter 21)