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"home " "stone "

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

"But," said the small fellow, "whatever you choose to call them, or however you choose to think of them, we made a bargain!" "You have no Home Stone," said the bearded man. - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 29, Sentence #179)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
29 179 "But," said the small fellow, "whatever you choose to call them, or however you choose to think of them, we made a bargain!" "You have no home stone," said the bearded man.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
29 176 How, then, could we expect to be exempt from them? Sometimes even high pleasure slaves in the palaces of ubars must, if only to remind them that they are slaves, on their hands and knees, stripped and chained, scrub floors.
29 177 Still, surely we were good for far more than such things.
29 178 Did the beauty of our faces, and our slave curves, not suggest that? Surely the first and most essential office of the female slave, and, indeed, of any sort of female slave, is to be pleasing to the master.
29 179 "But," said the small fellow, "whatever you choose to call them, or however you choose to think of them, we made a bargain!" "You have no home stone," said the bearded man.
29 180 I shuddered.
29 181 In such a fashion he had informed the small fellow that he was not such that one need keep faith with him.
29 182 There is a Gorean saying that only Priest-Kings, outlaws and slaves lack home stones.
How, then, could we expect to be exempt from them? Sometimes even high pleasure slaves in the palaces of ubars must, if only to remind them that they are slaves, on their hands and knees, stripped and chained, scrub floors. Still, surely we were good for far more than such things. Did the beauty of our faces, and our slave curves, not suggest that? Surely the first and most essential office of the female slave, and, indeed, of any sort of female slave, is to be pleasing to the master. "But," said the small fellow, "whatever you choose to call them, or however you choose to think of them, we made a bargain!" "You have no home stone," said the bearded man. I shuddered. In such a fashion he had informed the small fellow that he was not such that one need keep faith with him. There is a Gorean saying that only Priest-Kings, outlaws and slaves lack home stones. - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 29)