Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
6
624
In the house we had been locked in our kennels.
6
625
Too, I had heard that at night it was not unusual for beautiful female slaves to be chained at the foot of their master's couch, fastened there to a slave ring, the chain usually running to a manacle on their left ankle or a collar on their neck.
6
626
The fact that I now realized I was subject to theft frightened me, but it, too, like many other things, seemed an attachment of my condition, a simple consequence of what I was.
6
627
I recalled hearing now, in the house, of "capture rights," respected in law.
6
628
I had originally thought these rights referred to the acquisition of free women but I had later realized they must pertain, more generally, to the acquisition of properties in general, including slaves.
6
629
I had not thought much about such things, in a real, or practical, sense, until now, now that I was outside of the house.
6
630
I tried to recall my lessons.
In the house we had been locked in our kennels.
Too, I had heard that at night it was not unusual for beautiful female slaves to be chained at the foot of their master's couch, fastened there to a slave ring, the chain usually running to a manacle on their left ankle or a collar on their neck.
The fact that I now realized I was subject to theft frightened me, but it, too, like many other things, seemed an attachment of my condition, a simple consequence of what I was.
I recalled hearing now, in the house, of "capture rights," respected in law.
I had originally thought these rights referred to the acquisition of free women but I had later realized they must pertain, more generally, to the acquisition of properties in general, including slaves.
I had not thought much about such things, in a real, or practical, sense, until now, now that I was outside of the house.
I tried to recall my lessons.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter )