• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"free " "companion "

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

More commendably, a free woman may herself, of her own free will, agree to be such a companion. - (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #126)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 126 More commendably, a free woman may herself, of her own free will, agree to be such a companion.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
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.
6 129 Such relationships are not entered into lightly, and they are normally sundered only by death.
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. Such relationships are not entered into lightly, and they are normally sundered only by death. - (Outlaw of Gor, Chapter 6)