• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"tribes "

Book 17. (1 results) Savages of Gor (Individual Quote)

To be sure, most of the tribes had no particular animus toward the Dust Legs, other than, perhaps, to look down upon them somewhat because of their trading, and their relationships with white men. - (Savages of Gor, Chapter 14, Sentence #454)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 454 To be sure, most of the tribes had no particular animus toward the Dust Legs, other than, perhaps, to look down upon them somewhat because of their trading, and their relationships with white men.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
14 451 Too, I suppose, if Grunt had wanted it, the red savage might have left him the other girl's shirt dress.
14 452 But he did not need it, or want it.
14 453 Too, its cut, fringing, and beading doubtless identified it as Dust Leg.
14 454 To be sure, most of the tribes had no particular animus toward the Dust Legs, other than, perhaps, to look down upon them somewhat because of their trading, and their relationships with white men.
14 455 Another reason for bringing white female slaves into the Barrens in tunics is that this, apparently, in the eyes of the red savages, seems to certify them as authentic white females, so to speak, namely, females from the far-off "white world," women from the distant white civilizations.
14 456 And it pleases them to have such women as their complete and abject slaves.
14 457 This has to do, one supposes, with what has been spoken of as the Memory.
Too, I suppose, if Grunt had wanted it, the red savage might have left him the other girl's shirt dress. But he did not need it, or want it. Too, its cut, fringing, and beading doubtless identified it as Dust Leg. To be sure, most of the tribes had no particular animus toward the Dust Legs, other than, perhaps, to look down upon them somewhat because of their trading, and their relationships with white men. Another reason for bringing white female slaves into the Barrens in tunics is that this, apparently, in the eyes of the red savages, seems to certify them as authentic white females, so to speak, namely, females from the far-off "white world," women from the distant white civilizations. And it pleases them to have such women as their complete and abject slaves. This has to do, one supposes, with what has been spoken of as the Memory. - (Savages of Gor, Chapter 14)