Book 34. (1 results) Plunder of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
68
246
Sometimes, however, an exchange is not an even exchange, slave for slave, or two slaves for one slave, or such, but a certain amount of money may also be involved.
Sometimes, however, an exchange is not an even exchange, slave for slave, or two slaves for one slave, or such, but a certain amount of money may also be involved.
- (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 68, Sentence #246)
Book 34. (7 results) Plunder of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
68
243
In it slaves may be exchanged.
68
244
I suppose it is a market of sorts as, in it, one may use one slave to, so to speak, buy another.
68
245
Slaves are the primary currency, rather than coins.
68
246
Sometimes, however, an exchange is not an even exchange, slave for slave, or two slaves for one slave, or such, but a certain amount of money may also be involved.
68
247
For example, a slave, say, A, might be exchanged for a slave B, but only if, say, A's owner or B's owner adds in, say, a number of copper tarsks.
68
248
One slave might go then for, say, another slave, and twenty copper tarsks.
68
249
The owner of the establishment often involves himself, to his profit, in some speculative trading, but, for the most part, he earns his living by, first, charging for access to the premises, and, second, receiving a small honorarium for every slave placed on the wheel.
In it slaves may be exchanged.
I suppose it is a market of sorts as, in it, one may use one slave to, so to speak, buy another.
Slaves are the primary currency, rather than coins.
Sometimes, however, an exchange is not an even exchange, slave for slave, or two slaves for one slave, or such, but a certain amount of money may also be involved.
For example, a slave, say, A, might be exchanged for a slave B, but only if, say, A's owner or B's owner adds in, say, a number of copper tarsks.
One slave might go then for, say, another slave, and twenty copper tarsks.
The owner of the establishment often involves himself, to his profit, in some speculative trading, but, for the most part, he earns his living by, first, charging for access to the premises, and, second, receiving a small honorarium for every slave placed on the wheel.
- (Plunder of Gor, Chapter 68)