Book 25. (1 results) Magicians of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
443
Also, given the xenophobia common on Gor, often obtaining among cities, the distrust of the stranger, the contempt for the outsider, and such, there is a special ease in a master's relating to a foreign slave, one with whom he has never shared a homestone.
Also, given the xenophobia common on Gor, often obtaining among cities, the distrust of the stranger, the contempt for the outsider, and such, there is a special ease in a master's relating to a foreign slave, one with whom he has never shared a Home Stone.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #443)
Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
440
Women taken in a given city, incidentally, are usually sold out of the city, to wear their collars elsewhere.
10
441
In this fashion the transition from their former to their subsequent condition is made particularly clear to them.
10
442
They must begin anew, as a new form of being, that of a lovely animal, the female slave.
10
443
Also, given the xenophobia common on Gor, often obtaining among cities, the distrust of the stranger, the contempt for the outsider, and such, there is a special ease in a master's relating to a foreign slave, one with whom he has never shared a homestone.
10
444
Similarly, of course, there is a special urgency and terror on the part of the slave, in finding that she now belongs helplessly to one of a different polity.
10
445
She understands that it may be difficult to please such a master, one likely to be harsh and demanding, who may despise her, who may think nothing of subjecting her to cruel punishments, and that she must accordingly, if she would even live, strive desperately to be pleasing to him.
10
446
They can thus, the girl's antecedents, like her name and clothing, stripped away, and his unknown to her, begin as pure master and slave.
Women taken in a given city, incidentally, are usually sold out of the city, to wear their collars elsewhere.
In this fashion the transition from their former to their subsequent condition is made particularly clear to them.
They must begin anew, as a new form of being, that of a lovely animal, the female slave.
Also, given the xenophobia common on Gor, often obtaining among cities, the distrust of the stranger, the contempt for the outsider, and such, there is a special ease in a master's relating to a foreign slave, one with whom he has never shared a home stone.
Similarly, of course, there is a special urgency and terror on the part of the slave, in finding that she now belongs helplessly to one of a different polity.
She understands that it may be difficult to please such a master, one likely to be harsh and demanding, who may despise her, who may think nothing of subjecting her to cruel punishments, and that she must accordingly, if she would even live, strive desperately to be pleasing to him.
They can thus, the girl's antecedents, like her name and clothing, stripped away, and his unknown to her, begin as pure master and slave.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 10)