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"slave " "person "

Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)

The free person might be simply slain; the slave, as a valued domestic animal, would be far more likely to be spared. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 5, Sentence #172)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
5 172 The free person might be simply slain; the slave, as a valued domestic animal, would be far more likely to be spared.

Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
5 169 Women well understand the switch, the whip, the rope, the chain, such things, often from the very first sight of them.
5 170 Outside the stable, a slave, not knowing herself a slave, she might inadvertently behave improperly, and find herself subjected to reprimands which might place her very life in jeopardy.
5 171 Too, in many milieus it is far safer for a woman to be a slave than to be free.
5 172 The free person might be simply slain; the slave, as a valued domestic animal, would be far more likely to be spared.
5 173 Similarly, one would not slay valued kaiila but would add them to one's herds.
5 174 Peisistratus then spoke to the brunette in English.
5 175 "Repeat," he said, "firmly, and clearly, the first words you learned in Gorean".
Women well understand the switch, the whip, the rope, the chain, such things, often from the very first sight of them. Outside the stable, a slave, not knowing herself a slave, she might inadvertently behave improperly, and find herself subjected to reprimands which might place her very life in jeopardy. Too, in many milieus it is far safer for a woman to be a slave than to be free. The free person might be simply slain; the slave, as a valued domestic animal, would be far more likely to be spared. Similarly, one would not slay valued kaiila but would add them to one's herds. Peisistratus then spoke to the brunette in English. "Repeat," he said, "firmly, and clearly, the first words you learned in Gorean". - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 5)