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"slave " "person "

Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)

The narrative, I fear is only too obviously a first-person story, though I have tried to tell it with some objectivity, largely in the third person, as perhaps befits a collared slave. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30, Sentence #594)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
30 594 The narrative, I fear is only too obviously a first-person story, though I have tried to tell it with some objectivity, largely in the third person, as perhaps befits a collared slave.

Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
30 591 It is written with the permission of my master.
30 592 That such a thing, this writing, might be done was suggested to my master by his friend, Bosk, of Port Kar.
30 593 I am deeply grateful to my master for permitting me to write this, and to that unusual, complex gentleman, Bosk of Port Kar, scholar and warrior, master of weapons and slaves, sometimes so fierce and terrible, sometimes so thoughtful and gentle, uncompromising but understanding, for suggesting that it might be done.
30 594 The narrative, I fear is only too obviously a first-person story, though I have tried to tell it with some objectivity, largely in the third person, as perhaps befits a collared slave.
30 595 To be sure, I fear my feelings have often intruded themselves.
30 596 Indeed, sometimes I fear that I have spoken in the first person and not the third.
30 597 This is then, I conjecture, a first-person narrative expressed largely, humbly, I trust, in the third person.
It is written with the permission of my master. That such a thing, this writing, might be done was suggested to my master by his friend, Bosk, of Port Kar. I am deeply grateful to my master for permitting me to write this, and to that unusual, complex gentleman, Bosk of Port Kar, scholar and warrior, master of weapons and slaves, sometimes so fierce and terrible, sometimes so thoughtful and gentle, uncompromising but understanding, for suggesting that it might be done. The narrative, I fear is only too obviously a first-person story, though I have tried to tell it with some objectivity, largely in the third person, as perhaps befits a collared slave. To be sure, I fear my feelings have often intruded themselves. Indeed, sometimes I fear that I have spoken in the first person and not the third. This is then, I conjecture, a first-person narrative expressed largely, humbly, I trust, in the third person. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30)