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"customs "

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

If she is enslaved, of course, then she is subject to, and covered by, the same customs, practices and laws as any other slave. - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #638)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 638 If she is enslaved, of course, then she is subject to, and covered by, the same customs, practices and laws as any other slave.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 635 Analogies are that it is not permitted to animals to challenge the tethers on their necks, or flee the posts within which they find themselves penned, that money must retain its value, and buying power, regardless of who has it in hand, and so on.
6 636 Strictures of this sort, of course, do not apply to free persons, such as free women.
6 637 A free woman is entitled to try to escape a captor as best she can, and without penalty, even after her first night in his bonds, if she still chooses to do so.
6 638 If she is enslaved, of course, then she is subject to, and covered by, the same customs, practices and laws as any other slave.
6 639 The point of these statutes, it seems, is to keep the slave in perfect custody, at all times, and to encourage boldness on the part of males.
6 640 After the slave has been in the possession of the thief, or captor, for one week she counts as being legally his.
6 641 To be sure, the original master may attempt to steal her back.
Analogies are that it is not permitted to animals to challenge the tethers on their necks, or flee the posts within which they find themselves penned, that money must retain its value, and buying power, regardless of who has it in hand, and so on. Strictures of this sort, of course, do not apply to free persons, such as free women. A free woman is entitled to try to escape a captor as best she can, and without penalty, even after her first night in his bonds, if she still chooses to do so. If she is enslaved, of course, then she is subject to, and covered by, the same customs, practices and laws as any other slave. The point of these statutes, it seems, is to keep the slave in perfect custody, at all times, and to encourage boldness on the part of males. After the slave has been in the possession of the thief, or captor, for one week she counts as being legally his. To be sure, the original master may attempt to steal her back. - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 6)