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

As is probably well known, females on Gor, like gold and silver, and domestic animals, and such, commonly count as legitimate loot. - (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 9, Sentence #601)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
9 601 As is probably well known, females on Gor, like gold and silver, and domestic animals, and such, commonly count as legitimate loot.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
9 598 There were perhaps a quarter million slaves in Ar, the great majority of which were female.
9 599 "Nor she, either," said Talena.
9 600 What was going on on the platform was of great interest to me.
9 601 As is probably well known, females on Gor, like gold and silver, and domestic animals, and such, commonly count as legitimate loot.
9 602 Certainly there is no doubt about this in the case of the female slave, who is a property, a domestic animal, to begin with.
9 603 On the other hand, it should also be understood that the free women of a conquered city, or territory, if spared, are also commonly understood as, and ranked as, in their own minds and in that of the conquerors, as loot.
9 604 It is one thing, of course, for a fellow in a flaming city to throw a woman against a wall and tear off her clothes and then, if he likes her, keep her, and quite another for the women of a conquered city, levied, and in the name of reparations, atonement, and such, to line up for their assessment.
There were perhaps a quarter million slaves in Ar, the great majority of which were female. "Nor she, either," said Talena. What was going on on the platform was of great interest to me. As is probably well known, females on Gor, like gold and silver, and domestic animals, and such, commonly count as legitimate loot. Certainly there is no doubt about this in the case of the female slave, who is a property, a domestic animal, to begin with. On the other hand, it should also be understood that the free women of a conquered city, or territory, if spared, are also commonly understood as, and ranked as, in their own minds and in that of the conquerors, as loot. It is one thing, of course, for a fellow in a flaming city to throw a woman against a wall and tear off her clothes and then, if he likes her, keep her, and quite another for the women of a conquered city, levied, and in the name of reparations, atonement, and such, to line up for their assessment. - (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 9)