Book 21. (1 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
747
There you will be evaluated, bid upon and purchased, as different animals, as separate properties, merely as independent items up for sale, solely on your own merits.
There you will be evaluated, bid upon and purchased, as different animals, as separate properties, merely as independent items up for sale, solely on your own merits.
- (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 16, Sentence #747)
Book 21. (7 results) Mercenaries of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
744
"You are now only two women," I said, "each in the custody of impartial iron, each presumably destined to stand by herself on the sawdust of the slave block, each, separately, to helplessly submit to, and endure, the objective scrutiny of buyers.
16
745
There it will not matter that you are mother and daughter.
16
746
Probably you will not even be sold in proximity to one another, but in the order of your numbers, or in some order deemed aesthetically or commercially appropriate by professional slavers.
16
747
There you will be evaluated, bid upon and purchased, as different animals, as separate properties, merely as independent items up for sale, solely on your own merits.
16
748
Then you will go your own ways, doubtless never to see one another again, doubtless each to the chains of a separate master.
16
749
I wonder who will make the better slave?" I then touched her, gently, again.
16
750
"Ohhh," she said, softly.
"You are now only two women," I said, "each in the custody of impartial iron, each presumably destined to stand by herself on the sawdust of the slave block, each, separately, to helplessly submit to, and endure, the objective scrutiny of buyers.
There it will not matter that you are mother and daughter.
Probably you will not even be sold in proximity to one another, but in the order of your numbers, or in some order deemed aesthetically or commercially appropriate by professional slavers.
There you will be evaluated, bid upon and purchased, as different animals, as separate properties, merely as independent items up for sale, solely on your own merits.
Then you will go your own ways, doubtless never to see one another again, doubtless each to the chains of a separate master.
I wonder who will make the better slave?" I then touched her, gently, again.
"Ohhh," she said, softly.
- (Mercenaries of Gor, Chapter 16)