Book 26. (7 results) Witness of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
18
86
There are, of course, many differences among slaves, ranging from the preferred slave of a ubar, often a witty, literate, talented, highly educated, brilliant woman, though she, too, is at his feet, to the simplest kettle-and-mat wench, who, too, of course, is expected to be a throbbing, kicking, helpless delight in the furs, or blankets.
18
87
It might be noted, in passing, that when a woman has been embonded she is then understood as, and taken as, unmitigatedly, a slave.
18
88
That is what she then is.
18
89
For example, let us suppose that several women of a given city, say, A, are now slaves in a given city, say, B.
18
90
Let us then further suppose that these women are recovered, so to speak, in a raid perhaps, or perhaps in war, perhaps in B's having fallen.
18
91
The women will not now be freed.
18
92
They will be kept as slaves, for that is what they now are.
There are, of course, many differences among slaves, ranging from the preferred slave of a ubar, often a witty, literate, talented, highly educated, brilliant woman, though she, too, is at his feet, to the simplest kettle-and-mat wench, who, too, of course, is expected to be a throbbing, kicking, helpless delight in the furs, or blankets.
It might be noted, in passing, that when a woman has been embonded she is then understood as, and taken as, unmitigatedly, a slave.
That is what she then is.
For example, let us suppose that several women of a given city, say, A, are now slaves in a given city, say, B.
Let us then further suppose that these women are recovered, so to speak, in a raid perhaps, or perhaps in war, perhaps in B's having fallen.
The women will not now be freed.
They will be kept as slaves, for that is what they now are.
- (Witness of Gor, Chapter )