Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
18
49
This sort of thing may be difficult for those of Earth to understand.
18
50
Perhaps they must content themselves to do the best they can with it.
18
51
The slave is a lovely animal—can those of Earth even understand this?—tender, vulnerable, graceful, needful—and she can think, and feel, and speak, and serve, and love! Surely then it is easy to understand how her presence might be thought to improve a cityscape, a villa, a beach.
18
52
What red-blooded male would object to viewing us? What truly virile male would object to owning one or more of us? And suppose that we were not that rare.
18
53
Think of the flower trees, the brightly plumaged birds! Surely, in some way, we not only characterize, but adorn, a city.
18
54
One of the pleasures of fellows coming in from the country is to look upon the urban slaves, for which purpose they will stroll the avenues and loiter about in the plazas, the markets, and bazaars.
18
55
We are apparently much different from the slaves they are used to, usually sturdy, large-boned girls, often of peasant stock, the sort which are most useful in the fields.
This sort of thing may be difficult for those of Earth to understand.
Perhaps they must content themselves to do the best they can with it.
The slave is a lovely animal—can those of Earth even understand this?—tender, vulnerable, graceful, needful—and she can think, and feel, and speak, and serve, and love! Surely then it is easy to understand how her presence might be thought to improve a cityscape, a villa, a beach.
What red-blooded male would object to viewing us? What truly virile male would object to owning one or more of us? And suppose that we were not that rare.
Think of the flower trees, the brightly plumaged birds! Surely, in some way, we not only characterize, but adorn, a city.
One of the pleasures of fellows coming in from the country is to look upon the urban slaves, for which purpose they will stroll the avenues and loiter about in the plazas, the markets, and bazaars.
We are apparently much different from the slaves they are used to, usually sturdy, large-boned girls, often of peasant stock, the sort which are most useful in the fields.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter )