Book 5. (7 results) Assassin of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
9
10
Often in these matters, conducted under supervision, both slaves are hooded, in order that they not know who it is with whom they are forced to mate, lest they might, in their moment of union, in their common degradation, care for one another, or fall in love.
9
11
The largest number of slaves, however, far larger than the bred slaves considered as a group, are those who have been born free and have fallen into slavery, a not uncommon fate on this cruel, warlike world, particularly for women.
9
12
Slave raids are a major business, and from time to time, a city falls.
9
13
Slavers are angry, incidentally, when a city does fall, for then the market is likely to be depressed for months, due to the influx of new slaves, sometimes numbered in the thousands.
9
14
The slavers, by the way, indulge in speculation and manipulation whenever possible, trying to anticipate changes in fashion or control them.
9
15
I suspected that the House of Cernus was attempting to create a need for barbarian girls, if only to add variety to a rich man's Pleasure Gardens—girls of a sort it seemed it could supply in numbers not possible to competing slavers.
9
16
The major obstacle to this plan, of course, was that barbarian girls tended to be ignorant and untrained.
Often in these matters, conducted under supervision, both slaves are hooded, in order that they not know who it is with whom they are forced to mate, lest they might, in their moment of union, in their common degradation, care for one another, or fall in love.
The largest number of slaves, however, far larger than the bred slaves considered as a group, are those who have been born free and have fallen into slavery, a not uncommon fate on this cruel, warlike world, particularly for women.
Slave raids are a major business, and from time to time, a city falls.
Slavers are angry, incidentally, when a city does fall, for then the market is likely to be depressed for months, due to the influx of new slaves, sometimes numbered in the thousands.
The slavers, by the way, indulge in speculation and manipulation whenever possible, trying to anticipate changes in fashion or control them.
I suspected that the House of Cernus was attempting to create a need for barbarian girls, if only to add variety to a rich man's Pleasure Gardens—girls of a sort it seemed it could supply in numbers not possible to competing slavers.
The major obstacle to this plan, of course, was that barbarian girls tended to be ignorant and untrained.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter )