Book 5. (1 results) Assassin of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
5
513
She still wore the brief, exciting leather of a Tuchuk wagon girl and, when striding the high bridges, her hair in the wind, she attracted much attention, not only, obviously, from the men, but from women, both slave and free.
She still wore the brief, exciting leather of a Tuchuk wagon girl and, when striding the high bridges, her hair in the wind, she attracted much attention, not only, obviously, from the men, but from women, both slave and free.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 5, Sentence #513)
Book 5. (7 results) Assassin of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
5
510
I remember the days in Ko-ro-ba fondly, though there were certain problems.
5
511
Or perhaps one should say, simply, there was Elizabeth.
5
512
Elizabeth, besides speaking boldly out on a large number of delicate civic, social and political issues, usually not regarded as the province of the fairer sex, categorically refused to wear the cumbersome Robes of Concealment traditionally expected of the free woman.
5
513
She still wore the brief, exciting leather of a Tuchuk wagon girl and, when striding the high bridges, her hair in the wind, she attracted much attention, not only, obviously, from the men, but from women, both slave and free.
5
514
Once a slave girl bumped into her on one of the bridges and struck at her, thinking she was only slave, but Elizabeth, with a swift blow of her small fist, downed the girl, and managed to seize one ankle and prevent her from tumbling from the bridge.
5
515
"Slave!" cried the girl.
5
516
At this point Elizabeth hit her again, almost knocking her once more from the bridge.
I remember the days in Ko-ro-ba fondly, though there were certain problems.
Or perhaps one should say, simply, there was Elizabeth.
Elizabeth, besides speaking boldly out on a large number of delicate civic, social and political issues, usually not regarded as the province of the fairer sex, categorically refused to wear the cumbersome Robes of Concealment traditionally expected of the free woman.
She still wore the brief, exciting leather of a Tuchuk wagon girl and, when striding the high bridges, her hair in the wind, she attracted much attention, not only, obviously, from the men, but from women, both slave and free.
Once a slave girl bumped into her on one of the bridges and struck at her, thinking she was only slave, but Elizabeth, with a swift blow of her small fist, downed the girl, and managed to seize one ankle and prevent her from tumbling from the bridge.
"Slave!" cried the girl.
At this point Elizabeth hit her again, almost knocking her once more from the bridge.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 5)