Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
33
146
He is a Scribe".
33
147
"Perhaps," I said, "you would like a private master?" She leaned forward.
33
148
"Oh, yes, yes, master!" she wept.
33
149
"I want a private master, a private master!" This is not unusual amongst slaves.
33
150
It is a common dream of public slaves, tavern slaves, brothel slaves, the girls of the laundries, the public kitchens, the mills, and such, that they should have a private master.
33
151
And, of course, the dream goes far beyond this, for usually the dream is to be the single slave of a private master, to be the only slave in her master's household.
33
152
For example, there is often much misery, much grief, even lamentation, in the pleasure garden of a rich man, who is assuredly a private master, where slaves may often constitute little more than another adornment, much as the colored grasses, the trimmed shrubberies, the beds of flowers, the exotic trees, the unusual fruits, to enhance the beauty of the garden.
He is a Scribe".
"Perhaps," I said, "you would like a private master?" She leaned forward.
"Oh, yes, yes, master!" she wept.
"I want a private master, a private master!" This is not unusual amongst slaves.
It is a common dream of public slaves, tavern slaves, brothel slaves, the girls of the laundries, the public kitchens, the mills, and such, that they should have a private master.
And, of course, the dream goes far beyond this, for usually the dream is to be the single slave of a private master, to be the only slave in her master's household.
For example, there is often much misery, much grief, even lamentation, in the pleasure garden of a rich man, who is assuredly a private master, where slaves may often constitute little more than another adornment, much as the colored grasses, the trimmed shrubberies, the beds of flowers, the exotic trees, the unusual fruits, to enhance the beauty of the garden.
- (Mariners of Gor, Chapter )