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Book 35. (1 results) Quarry of Gor (Individual Quote)

And, of course, as slaves, we are animals, and is it not appropriate that animals be caged? In the distance, through the passages, I heard the gong sound. - (Quarry of Gor, Chapter 4, Sentence #8)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
4 8 And, of course, as slaves, we are animals, and is it not appropriate that animals be caged? In the distance, through the passages, I heard the gong sound.

Book 35. (7 results) Quarry of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
4 5 Aside from the obvious custodial aspects of such a device, it has its aesthetic and psychological aspects, as well.
4 6 Aesthetically, men apparently find us attractive in cages.
4 7 And, psychologically, they enjoy seeing us as the slaves we are, helplessly caged, confined within the limits they have seen fit to impose on us, and, of course, from the slave's point of view, psychologically, we well understand ourselves to be the slaves we are.
4 8 And, of course, as slaves, we are animals, and is it not appropriate that animals be caged? In the distance, through the passages, I heard the gong sound.
4 9 Adraste, then, she supposedly brought in from the World's End, who had been the slave behind me in line, must have been sold.
4 10 She, exquisitely featured, excitingly figured, dark-haired, green-eyed, and olive-skinned, was surely one of most beautiful women I had ever seen.
4 11 I recalled that two of the slaver's men, before I had ascended the block, had been bemused that such an item, supposedly worthy of the central block of the Curulean, whatever that was or wherever it might be, should be offered in this market, near the wharves, in an evening sale.
Aside from the obvious custodial aspects of such a device, it has its aesthetic and psychological aspects, as well. Aesthetically, men apparently find us attractive in cages. And, psychologically, they enjoy seeing us as the slaves we are, helplessly caged, confined within the limits they have seen fit to impose on us, and, of course, from the slave's point of view, psychologically, we well understand ourselves to be the slaves we are. And, of course, as slaves, we are animals, and is it not appropriate that animals be caged? In the distance, through the passages, I heard the gong sound. Adraste, then, she supposedly brought in from the World's End, who had been the slave behind me in line, must have been sold. She, exquisitely featured, excitingly figured, dark-haired, green-eyed, and olive-skinned, was surely one of most beautiful women I had ever seen. I recalled that two of the slaver's men, before I had ascended the block, had been bemused that such an item, supposedly worthy of the central block of the Curulean, whatever that was or wherever it might be, should be offered in this market, near the wharves, in an evening sale. - (Quarry of Gor, Chapter 4)