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"cities " "dust "

Book 17. (7 results) Savages of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 90 It was easy to see why dust-Leg men might find such goods of interest.
14 91 It might be pleasant to have such a lovely animal about, to cook one's meat, to keep one's lodge and please one, humbly and obediently, in the furs.
14 92 I could also see why dust-Leg women could view such a commodity with distaste and contempt.
14 93 How could they, free, begin to compete with a slave? How could they even begin to do so, unless they, themselves, also became slaves? "Two," said the dust-Leg woman.
14 94 "Five," I said.
14 95 My interest in the Barrens, of course, was not in trading.
14 96 As far as I was concerned I might have given the woman the mirror.
It was easy to see why dust-Leg men might find such goods of interest. It might be pleasant to have such a lovely animal about, to cook one's meat, to keep one's lodge and please one, humbly and obediently, in the furs. I could also see why dust-Leg women could view such a commodity with distaste and contempt. How could they, free, begin to compete with a slave? How could they even begin to do so, unless they, themselves, also became slaves? "Two," said the dust-Leg woman. "Five," I said. My interest in the Barrens, of course, was not in trading. As far as I was concerned I might have given the woman the mirror. - (Savages of Gor, Chapter )