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"mercy "

Book 18. (1 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Individual Quote)

Their expressions may be the more easily seen and their cries for mercy, or promises of better service, or assurances of reformed behavior, or even of perfect behavior, may be the more clearly heard. - (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 43, Sentence #367)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
43 367 Their expressions may be the more easily seen and their cries for mercy, or promises of better service, or assurances of reformed behavior, or even of perfect behavior, may be the more clearly heard.

Book 18. (7 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
43 364 The heads of the slaves are usually left free.
43 365 Similarly they are seldom gagged.
43 366 In these ways they provide greater amusement for the spectators.
43 367 Their expressions may be the more easily seen and their cries for mercy, or promises of better service, or assurances of reformed behavior, or even of perfect behavior, may be the more clearly heard.
43 368 Sometimes the young men organize races in which slave girls are dragged behind the kaiila.
43 369 When the young men set themselves to the development of such plans small slave girls in a camp, particularly white ones, tend to become afraid, for they know that they are not much weight for a kaiila to pull.
43 370 I turned the kaiila in a wide circle at the end of the promenade, the bags, like swift, twin plows, taut on their ropes, throwing up two trails of dust.
The heads of the slaves are usually left free. Similarly they are seldom gagged. In these ways they provide greater amusement for the spectators. Their expressions may be the more easily seen and their cries for mercy, or promises of better service, or assurances of reformed behavior, or even of perfect behavior, may be the more clearly heard. Sometimes the young men organize races in which slave girls are dragged behind the kaiila. When the young men set themselves to the development of such plans small slave girls in a camp, particularly white ones, tend to become afraid, for they know that they are not much weight for a kaiila to pull. I turned the kaiila in a wide circle at the end of the promenade, the bags, like swift, twin plows, taut on their ropes, throwing up two trails of dust. - (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 43)