• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"free " "women "

Book 25. (1 results) Magicians of Gor (Individual Quote)

On the other hand, the free women of a conquered city, or at least the fairest among them, are often reckoned by besiegers as counting within the yield of prospective loot. - (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #407)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 407 On the other hand, the free women of a conquered city, or at least the fairest among them, are often reckoned by besiegers as counting within the yield of prospective loot.

Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 404 Then the free woman, in fury, with her small, gloved hand, lashed the face of the slave girl, back and forth, some three or four times.
1 405 She, the free woman, a free person, might be trampled by tharlarion, or be run through, or have her throat cut, by victors.
1 406 Such things were certainly possible.
1 407 On the other hand, the free women of a conquered city, or at least the fairest among them, are often reckoned by besiegers as counting within the yield of prospective loot.
1 408 Many is the free female in such a city who has torn away her robes before enemies, confessed her natural slavery, disavowed her previous masquerade as a free woman, and begged for the rightfulness of the brand and collar.
1 409 This is a scene which many free women have enacted in their imagination.
1 410 Such things figure, too, in the dreams of women, those doors to the secret truths of their being.
Then the free woman, in fury, with her small, gloved hand, lashed the face of the slave girl, back and forth, some three or four times. She, the free woman, a free person, might be trampled by tharlarion, or be run through, or have her throat cut, by victors. Such things were certainly possible. On the other hand, the free women of a conquered city, or at least the fairest among them, are often reckoned by besiegers as counting within the yield of prospective loot. Many is the free female in such a city who has torn away her robes before enemies, confessed her natural slavery, disavowed her previous masquerade as a free woman, and begged for the rightfulness of the brand and collar. This is a scene which many free women have enacted in their imagination. Such things figure, too, in the dreams of women, those doors to the secret truths of their being. - (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 1)