Book 19. (7 results) Kajira of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
30
151
I did not have the common garb of such slaves, such as the bell and coin box chained about my neck, of the coin girl, or the tavern silk, with its advertising, of a tavern's lure girl.
30
152
My absence from my kennel would presumably be reported by midnight, the twentieth hour of the Gorean day.
30
153
By morning guardsmen would be alerted to be on the lookout for me.
30
154
How, too, could I live in the city? I might try to live by begging and scavenging garbage for a time as do those vagrant free women sometimes called she-urts, but I, being collared, could never pass for one.
30
155
The she-urts often wear tunics almost as short as those of slaves.
30
156
This is supposedly to make it easier for them to flee from guardsmen.
30
157
On the other hand the guardsmen usually ignore them.
I did not have the common garb of such slaves, such as the bell and coin box chained about my neck, of the coin girl, or the tavern silk, with its advertising, of a tavern's lure girl.
My absence from my kennel would presumably be reported by midnight, the twentieth hour of the Gorean day.
By morning guardsmen would be alerted to be on the lookout for me.
How, too, could I live in the city? I might try to live by begging and scavenging garbage for a time as do those vagrant free women sometimes called she-urts, but I, being collared, could never pass for one.
The she-urts often wear tunics almost as short as those of slaves.
This is supposedly to make it easier for them to flee from guardsmen.
On the other hand the guardsmen usually ignore them.
- (Kajira of Gor, Chapter )