Book 19. (1 results) Kajira of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
11
Because of the width of the wagon bed and the height of the cage, some five feet or so above the surface of the wagon bed, I had been reasonably well protected from the blows of whips, the jabbings of sticks.
Because of the width of the wagon bed and the height of the cage, some five feet or so above the surface of the wagon bed, I had been reasonably well protected from the blows of whips, the jabbings of sticks.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 14, Sentence #11)
Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
14
8
The chain joining them I could feel, too, on my belly.
14
9
I could feel the extension of the central chain, below the manacles, too, on my body, and then it passed between my legs, lying on the iron floor, then making its rendezvous with my shackled ankles.
14
10
I had been dreaming that I was again being carried in the cage through the streets of Corcyrus.
14
11
Because of the width of the wagon bed and the height of the cage, some five feet or so above the surface of the wagon bed, I had been reasonably well protected from the blows of whips, the jabbings of sticks.
14
12
Soldiers, too, patrolled the perimeters of the moving wagon.
14
13
More than one man, pressing between the soldiers and clambering onto the wagon, sometimes unarmed, sometimes with a whip or stick, sometimes even with a knife, was seized and thrown back into the crowd by soldiers.
14
14
The crowds cheered Miles of Argentum and his men.
The chain joining them I could feel, too, on my belly.
I could feel the extension of the central chain, below the manacles, too, on my body, and then it passed between my legs, lying on the iron floor, then making its rendezvous with my shackled ankles.
I had been dreaming that I was again being carried in the cage through the streets of Corcyrus.
Because of the width of the wagon bed and the height of the cage, some five feet or so above the surface of the wagon bed, I had been reasonably well protected from the blows of whips, the jabbings of sticks.
Soldiers, too, patrolled the perimeters of the moving wagon.
More than one man, pressing between the soldiers and clambering onto the wagon, sometimes unarmed, sometimes with a whip or stick, sometimes even with a knife, was seized and thrown back into the crowd by soldiers.
The crowds cheered Miles of Argentum and his men.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter 14)