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"sword "

Book 26. (1 results) Witness of Gor (Individual Quote)

In the sacking of a city, slaves, like other domestic animals, other valuables, and such, are often saved, while free folk may be put to the sword. - (Witness of Gor, Chapter 24, Sentence #932)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
24 932 In the sacking of a city, slaves, like other domestic animals, other valuables, and such, are often saved, while free folk may be put to the sword.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
24 929 None of the slaves had been put to the sword.
24 930 Our collars, it seemed, had saved us.
24 931 This is not that unusual, incidentally.
24 932 In the sacking of a city, slaves, like other domestic animals, other valuables, and such, are often saved, while free folk may be put to the sword.
24 933 Indeed, sometimes free women, I have heard, take the collars from their own girls, putting them about their own necks, that they may increase their chances of survival.
24 934 They often then, self-collared, knot a rag about their hips, to conceal that they have no brand, and hurry into the streets, to surrender, as a slave, to one of the conquerors.
24 935 Sometimes their girls pursue them, to point them out to the conquerors.
None of the slaves had been put to the sword. Our collars, it seemed, had saved us. This is not that unusual, incidentally. In the sacking of a city, slaves, like other domestic animals, other valuables, and such, are often saved, while free folk may be put to the sword. Indeed, sometimes free women, I have heard, take the collars from their own girls, putting them about their own necks, that they may increase their chances of survival. They often then, self-collared, knot a rag about their hips, to conceal that they have no brand, and hurry into the streets, to surrender, as a slave, to one of the conquerors. Sometimes their girls pursue them, to point them out to the conquerors. - (Witness of Gor, Chapter 24)