Book 16. (1 results) Guardsman of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
4
The girls of the day, designated by a coiled whip pressed against their left shoulder, wearing their neck chains, with the attached bell and coin box, are sent into the streets in the late afternoon and expected to return before the nineteenth ahn.
The girls of the day, designated by a coiled whip pressed against their left shoulder, wearing their neck chains, with the attached bell and coin box, are sent into the streets in the late afternoon and expected to return before the nineteenth Ahn.
- (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 17, Sentence #4)
Book 16. (7 results) Guardsman of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
17
1
The Coin girl; I Dismiss Her It is called the Street of the Writhing Slave.
17
2
It is dark and narrow, and not far from the wharves.
17
3
It has its name from the fact that most renters of, and dealers in, Coin girls in Victoria, keep their kennels on this street.
17
4
The girls of the day, designated by a coiled whip pressed against their left shoulder, wearing their neck chains, with the attached bell and coin box, are sent into the streets in the late afternoon and expected to return before the nineteenth ahn.
17
5
And woe to the girl who does not return with a jangling coin box on her neck chain! Some girls, once designated, and locked in their accouterments, kneeling, weeping, scratch even at the insides of the stout gates of their masters' houses, hoping to be sent into the streets early, that their chances of turning a profit for their master, and thus avoiding a beating or torture, may be enhanced.
17
6
Such a lenience, however, is seldom shown to the girls, as it is against an agreement binding the entrepreneurs engaged in this trade.
17
7
Sometimes the girls are sent into the streets with their hands braceleted behind their backs.
The Coin girl; I Dismiss Her It is called the Street of the Writhing Slave.
It is dark and narrow, and not far from the wharves.
It has its name from the fact that most renters of, and dealers in, Coin girls in Victoria, keep their kennels on this street.
The girls of the day, designated by a coiled whip pressed against their left shoulder, wearing their neck chains, with the attached bell and coin box, are sent into the streets in the late afternoon and expected to return before the nineteenth ahn.
And woe to the girl who does not return with a jangling coin box on her neck chain! Some girls, once designated, and locked in their accouterments, kneeling, weeping, scratch even at the insides of the stout gates of their masters' houses, hoping to be sent into the streets early, that their chances of turning a profit for their master, and thus avoiding a beating or torture, may be enhanced.
Such a lenience, however, is seldom shown to the girls, as it is against an agreement binding the entrepreneurs engaged in this trade.
Sometimes the girls are sent into the streets with their hands braceleted behind their backs.
- (Guardsman of Gor, Chapter 17)