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Book 21. (1 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Individual Quote)

They had, objectively, little more to fear than other domestic animals. - (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 13, Sentence #69)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
13 69 They had, objectively, little more to fear than other domestic animals.

Book 21. (7 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
13 66 How frightened they had been, exchanging glances.
13 67 So, too, I supposed, might have been tharlarion and sleen, other forms of animals, if they, too, were aware of such things, or saw fit to consider them.
13 68 Yet Feiqa and Tula, objectively, had far less to fear in the fall of a city than a free person.
13 69 They had, objectively, little more to fear than other domestic animals.
13 70 They presumably, like them, would merely find themselves with new masters.
13 71 We had not put the tethers on Feiqa and Tula because we feared they might try to slip away from us in the crowds, but to keep them with us, to make certain that they were not swept from us, or perhaps seized and pulled away into the crowd.
13 72 Both were luscious slaves.
How frightened they had been, exchanging glances. So, too, I supposed, might have been tharlarion and sleen, other forms of animals, if they, too, were aware of such things, or saw fit to consider them. Yet Feiqa and Tula, objectively, had far less to fear in the fall of a city than a free person. They had, objectively, little more to fear than other domestic animals. They presumably, like them, would merely find themselves with new masters. We had not put the tethers on Feiqa and Tula because we feared they might try to slip away from us in the crowds, but to keep them with us, to make certain that they were not swept from us, or perhaps seized and pulled away into the crowd. Both were luscious slaves. - (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 13)