Book 29. (1 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
115
And such farms, too, commonly deal in exotics.
And such farms, too, commonly deal in exotics.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #115)
Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
2
112
It is much more convenient to acquire them when they are ready for plucking, so to speak.
2
113
Why raise the grapes when they are about, and one may pick them, as one sees fit, when they are nicely ready and ripe? To be sure, there are some slave farms which, after a few years, produce their annual crop, so to speak.
2
114
On the other hand, these enterprises usually require a large initial investment, say, large physical facilities, and hundreds of breeding slaves, male and female, to be carefully matched and crossed, and it normally takes years for the first crop to be readied for market.
2
115
And such farms, too, commonly deal in exotics.
2
116
The most common exotic is the virgin slave who has been raised without the knowledge that men exist.
2
117
Slaves, too, of course, may be bred for a diversity of colors, peltings, facial features, and such.
2
118
There is a technique, incidentally, based on a variation of the stabilization serums, for hastening physical maturation, but this is little used because one has then to show for one's pains only an unusual child.
It is much more convenient to acquire them when they are ready for plucking, so to speak.
Why raise the grapes when they are about, and one may pick them, as one sees fit, when they are nicely ready and ripe? To be sure, there are some slave farms which, after a few years, produce their annual crop, so to speak.
On the other hand, these enterprises usually require a large initial investment, say, large physical facilities, and hundreds of breeding slaves, male and female, to be carefully matched and crossed, and it normally takes years for the first crop to be readied for market.
And such farms, too, commonly deal in exotics.
The most common exotic is the virgin slave who has been raised without the knowledge that men exist.
Slaves, too, of course, may be bred for a diversity of colors, peltings, facial features, and such.
There is a technique, incidentally, based on a variation of the stabilization serums, for hastening physical maturation, but this is little used because one has then to show for one's pains only an unusual child.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 2)