Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
6
245
It had a very ugly sound.
6
246
I could not make out all she was saying but its import was surely uncomplimentary.
6
247
Among other things she called us "she-sleen" and "she-urts".
6
248
I did not know what a sleen might be, but I did know what an urt was.
6
249
When we had begun our training, shortly after we had been branded and collared, we had been kept in a lower level of the house, in a dank, dark, cold, musty area, seeming to consist largely of narrow corridors and cells, an area of damp, cold stone walls, of shadows and pools of water, chained in a large, common cell.
6
250
In this cell we bedded on damp straw, cast over the stone.
6
251
Our food, in the temporary light of lamps or lanterns, was thrown from pails to us, garbage perhaps, from the meals of others, and we could not, under penalties of the whip, use our hands to retrieve it.
It had a very ugly sound.
I could not make out all she was saying but its import was surely uncomplimentary.
Among other things she called us "she-sleen" and "she-urts".
I did not know what a sleen might be, but I did know what an urt was.
When we had begun our training, shortly after we had been branded and collared, we had been kept in a lower level of the house, in a dank, dark, cold, musty area, seeming to consist largely of narrow corridors and cells, an area of damp, cold stone walls, of shadows and pools of water, chained in a large, common cell.
In this cell we bedded on damp straw, cast over the stone.
Our food, in the temporary light of lamps or lanterns, was thrown from pails to us, garbage perhaps, from the meals of others, and we could not, under penalties of the whip, use our hands to retrieve it.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter )