Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
284
Women, I had gathered, on the other hand, would not be required to show such money.
Women, I had gathered, on the other hand, would not be required to show such money.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #284)
Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
281
The fifth was silent.
2
282
I recalled that the porter, when I had come to the outer gate, at the height of the bridge over the moat, seeing that I was not a female, had made me show money, and a considerable amount of it, before he had admitted me.
2
283
This was probably because of the crowding at the inn, and perhaps inflated prices, in these unusual, perilous times.
2
284
Women, I had gathered, on the other hand, would not be required to show such money.
2
285
This, of course, was presumably not so much because such a challenge might be thought to be demeaning to a free woman, as, perhaps, that women on Gor, in a sense, are themselves money.
2
286
They are, or can be, a medium of exchange, like currency.
2
287
This is particularly true of the slave, of course, who, like other goods, or domestic animals, has an ascertainable, finite value, whatever free persons are willing to pay for her.
The fifth was silent.
I recalled that the porter, when I had come to the outer gate, at the height of the bridge over the moat, seeing that I was not a female, had made me show money, and a considerable amount of it, before he had admitted me.
This was probably because of the crowding at the inn, and perhaps inflated prices, in these unusual, perilous times.
Women, I had gathered, on the other hand, would not be required to show such money.
This, of course, was presumably not so much because such a challenge might be thought to be demeaning to a free woman, as, perhaps, that women on Gor, in a sense, are themselves money.
They are, or can be, a medium of exchange, like currency.
This is particularly true of the slave, of course, who, like other goods, or domestic animals, has an ascertainable, finite value, whatever free persons are willing to pay for her.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 2)