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"law " "city "

Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
18 74 Tarnsmen draw lots and the winner sets out to obtain the particular woman.
18 75 If he has "chain luck" he brings her back and presents her, stripped, to a committee of peers.
18 76 They decide whether or not she is worthy to be a slave girl in their city.
18 77 Is she desirable enough, beautiful enough, to wear a collar in that city? One would not wish her to reflect poorly on the city, of course.
18 78 There seems, incidentally, to be a general view among hostile cities that the women of the enemy belong to them in some sense, that they are already in some sense their slaves—it is then just a matter of bringing them into their rightful collars.
18 79 The committee of peers, so to speak, in the "trophy case," may either rule favorably or unfavorably on the catch.
18 80 Let us suppose they rule unfavorably.
Tarnsmen draw lots and the winner sets out to obtain the particular woman. If he has "chain luck" he brings her back and presents her, stripped, to a committee of peers. They decide whether or not she is worthy to be a slave girl in their city. Is she desirable enough, beautiful enough, to wear a collar in that city? One would not wish her to reflect poorly on the city, of course. There seems, incidentally, to be a general view among hostile cities that the women of the enemy belong to them in some sense, that they are already in some sense their slaves—it is then just a matter of bringing them into their rightful collars. The committee of peers, so to speak, in the "trophy case," may either rule favorably or unfavorably on the catch. Let us suppose they rule unfavorably. - (Witness of Gor, Chapter )