• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"legal "

Book 31. (1 results) Conspirators of Gor (Individual Quote)

This was not Earth, in which a battery of social and legal weaponry might be invoked against any fellow so unwary as to dare to look honestly, openly, frankly, naturally, on a woman. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 7, Sentence #723)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
7 723 This was not Earth, in which a battery of social and legal weaponry might be invoked against any fellow so unwary as to dare to look honestly, openly, frankly, naturally, on a woman.

Book 31. (7 results) Conspirators of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
7 720 We were regarded with the innocence and interest that one might regard an animal, and, in the case of the female slave, an animal which one might consider owning, and having at one's slave ring.
7 721 At first I had been considerably disturbed at the frankness, the openness, the length, of such assessments, particularly if commanded, turned about, and posed, but of course, a slave, I dared not complain, nor evince, in any way, any objection to such detailed, candid perusals, even handlings.
7 722 I had no wish to be cuffed, or beaten.
7 723 This was not Earth, in which a battery of social and legal weaponry might be invoked against any fellow so unwary as to dare to look honestly, openly, frankly, naturally, on a woman.
7 724 I, of course, might be so looked upon, certainly here, on this world, on Gor, as I was an animal, a slave.
7 725 I was not a free woman, a person, a citizen, the possessor of a Home Stone.
7 726 I was not a proud creature of dignity and station.
We were regarded with the innocence and interest that one might regard an animal, and, in the case of the female slave, an animal which one might consider owning, and having at one's slave ring. At first I had been considerably disturbed at the frankness, the openness, the length, of such assessments, particularly if commanded, turned about, and posed, but of course, a slave, I dared not complain, nor evince, in any way, any objection to such detailed, candid perusals, even handlings. I had no wish to be cuffed, or beaten. This was not Earth, in which a battery of social and legal weaponry might be invoked against any fellow so unwary as to dare to look honestly, openly, frankly, naturally, on a woman. I, of course, might be so looked upon, certainly here, on this world, on Gor, as I was an animal, a slave. I was not a free woman, a person, a citizen, the possessor of a Home Stone. I was not a proud creature of dignity and station. - (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 7)