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Book 22. (1 results) Dancer of Gor (Individual Quote)

In this culture it seemed that slavery, bondage such as mine, at least, was an essential ingredient, that it was unquestioned, or, if it had been questioned, that the questions had been resolved long ago, and in favor of the collar, that it was a matter of tradition, perhaps a tradition of thousands of years, a tradition institutionalized in its social customs and fixed permanently and ineradicably in its legal structures. - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #337)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 337 In this culture it seemed that slavery, bondage such as mine, at least, was an essential ingredient, that it was unquestioned, or, if it had been questioned, that the questions had been resolved long ago, and in favor of the collar, that it was a matter of tradition, perhaps a tradition of thousands of years, a tradition institutionalized in its social customs and fixed permanently and ineradicably in its legal structures.

Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 334 Who knew? I pulled a bit at the manacles which held my hands behind my back.
6 335 My wrists were well locked in them.
6 336 I had considered earlier how they were made for women, and that this seemed significant in this culture.
6 337 In this culture it seemed that slavery, bondage such as mine, at least, was an essential ingredient, that it was unquestioned, or, if it had been questioned, that the questions had been resolved long ago, and in favor of the collar, that it was a matter of tradition, perhaps a tradition of thousands of years, a tradition institutionalized in its social customs and fixed permanently and ineradicably in its legal structures.
6 338 Too, in this culture, where there were such men, I did not think there was any real danger of susceptibility to the debilitating, antibiological pathologies of Earth.
6 339 I shuddered.
6 340 In this culture, at least, women such as I had nothing to fear, having everything to fear.
Who knew? I pulled a bit at the manacles which held my hands behind my back. My wrists were well locked in them. I had considered earlier how they were made for women, and that this seemed significant in this culture. In this culture it seemed that slavery, bondage such as mine, at least, was an essential ingredient, that it was unquestioned, or, if it had been questioned, that the questions had been resolved long ago, and in favor of the collar, that it was a matter of tradition, perhaps a tradition of thousands of years, a tradition institutionalized in its social customs and fixed permanently and ineradicably in its legal structures. Too, in this culture, where there were such men, I did not think there was any real danger of susceptibility to the debilitating, antibiological pathologies of Earth. I shuddered. In this culture, at least, women such as I had nothing to fear, having everything to fear. - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 6)