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"free " "companion "

Book 2. (1 results) Outlaw of Gor (Individual Quote)

Surprisingly enough, a woman who is bought from her parents, for tarns or gold, is regarded as a Free Companion, even though she may not have been consulted in the transaction. - (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #125)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 125 Surprisingly enough, a woman who is bought from her parents, for tarns or gold, is regarded as a free companion, even though she may not have been consulted in the transaction.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 122 Perhaps it was something in her carriage, something subtle and graceful, something which could not be concealed by the dejected cast of her shoulders, her slow gait and apparent exhaustion, no, not even by the coarse heavy robes she wore.
6 123 Such a girl, I thought, would surely have a master or, I hoped for her sake, a protector and companion.
6 124 There is no marriage, as we know it, on Gor, but there is the institution of the free companionship, which is its nearest correspondent.
6 125 Surprisingly enough, a woman who is bought from her parents, for tarns or gold, is regarded as a free companion, even though she may not have been consulted in the transaction.
6 126 More commendably, a free woman may herself, of her own free will, agree to be such a companion.
6 127 And it is not unusual for a master to free one of his slave girls in order that she may share the full privileges of a free companionship.
6 128 One may have, at a given time, an indefinite number of slaves, but only one free companion.
Perhaps it was something in her carriage, something subtle and graceful, something which could not be concealed by the dejected cast of her shoulders, her slow gait and apparent exhaustion, no, not even by the coarse heavy robes she wore. Such a girl, I thought, would surely have a master or, I hoped for her sake, a protector and companion. There is no marriage, as we know it, on Gor, but there is the institution of the free companionship, which is its nearest correspondent. Surprisingly enough, a woman who is bought from her parents, for tarns or gold, is regarded as a free companion, even though she may not have been consulted in the transaction. More commendably, a free woman may herself, of her own free will, agree to be such a companion. And it is not unusual for a master to free one of his slave girls in order that she may share the full privileges of a free companionship. One may have, at a given time, an indefinite number of slaves, but only one free companion. - (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter 6)