For a second time, the institution of slavery offers a chance for Hank to dissect the injustices of caste while also insinuating that his nineteenth-century society isn’t perhaps so far advanced over the sixth century one as he would like to believe. In both cases, the poor and the downtrodden are subject to the whims of the wealthy and powerful. And Hank’s inability to think of himself outside of his economic value—being sold for less than he considers himself worth—implicates him in political and economic structures that underwrite slavery.