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"brand "

Book 11. (1 results) Slave Girl of Gor (Individual Quote)

The girl who is bid upon and sold from the block wants to be bought because men have found her desirable, so desirable that they are willing to part with their silver, perhaps even with their very gold, to buy her; how miserable she would be to learn that it is only for her brand that she is valued. - (Slave Girl of Gor, Chapter 3, Sentence #552)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
3 552 The girl who is bid upon and sold from the block wants to be bought because men have found her desirable, so desirable that they are willing to part with their silver, perhaps even with their very gold, to buy her; how miserable she would be to learn that it is only for her brand that she is valued.

Book 11. (7 results) Slave Girl of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
3 549 Girls branded as I was were already spoken of on Gor, rather disparagingly, as "dinas".
3 550 Collectors now seldom sought for dinas.
3 551 This development, though perhaps a disappointment to certain merchants and slavers, was not unwelcome to the girls who bore the brand, though few cared for their feelings.
3 552 The girl who is bid upon and sold from the block wants to be bought because men have found her desirable, so desirable that they are willing to part with their silver, perhaps even with their very gold, to buy her; how miserable she would be to learn that it is only for her brand that she is valued.
3 553 There were other brands in my captor's camp.
3 554 Yet I had been made a "dina".
3 555 He had not done this for economic reasons.
Girls branded as I was were already spoken of on Gor, rather disparagingly, as "dinas". Collectors now seldom sought for dinas. This development, though perhaps a disappointment to certain merchants and slavers, was not unwelcome to the girls who bore the brand, though few cared for their feelings. The girl who is bid upon and sold from the block wants to be bought because men have found her desirable, so desirable that they are willing to part with their silver, perhaps even with their very gold, to buy her; how miserable she would be to learn that it is only for her brand that she is valued. There were other brands in my captor's camp. Yet I had been made a "dina". He had not done this for economic reasons. - (Slave Girl of Gor, Chapter 3)