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"male " "slave "

Book 2. (7 results) Outlaw of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 56 Few seem to object to the institution of capture, not even the women who might seem to be its victims.
6 57 On the contrary, incredibly enough, their vanity is terribly outraged if they are not regarded as worth the risks, usually mutilation and impalement.
6 58 One cruel courtesan in the great city of Ar, now little more than a toothless, wrinkled hag, boasted that more than four hundred men had died because of her beauty.
6 59 Why was the girl alone? Had her protectors been killed? Was she perhaps an escaped slave, fleeing from a hated master? Could she be, like myself, an exile from Ko-ro-ba? Its peoples have been scattered, I said to myself, and no two stones and no two men of Ko-ro-ba may stand again side by side.
6 60 I gritted my teeth.
6 61 The thought ran through my head, no stone may stand upon another stone.
6 62 If she were of Ko-ro-ba, I knew that I could not, for her own welfare, stay with her or help her.
Few seem to object to the institution of capture, not even the women who might seem to be its victims. On the contrary, incredibly enough, their vanity is terribly outraged if they are not regarded as worth the risks, usually mutilation and impalement. One cruel courtesan in the great city of Ar, now little more than a toothless, wrinkled hag, boasted that more than four hundred men had died because of her beauty. Why was the girl alone? Had her protectors been killed? Was she perhaps an escaped slave, fleeing from a hated master? Could she be, like myself, an exile from Ko-ro-ba? Its peoples have been scattered, I said to myself, and no two stones and no two men of Ko-ro-ba may stand again side by side. I gritted my teeth. The thought ran through my head, no stone may stand upon another stone. If she were of Ko-ro-ba, I knew that I could not, for her own welfare, stay with her or help her. - (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter )