Book 22. (1 results) Dancer of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
24
343
Some may have been as innocent as those I had lured, and might have been lured by other girls, such as I, and others might have been murderers and brigands, suitably enchained for the expiation of sentences, their custody having been legally transferred to Ionicus, my master, at the payment of a prisoner's fee, by the writ of a praetor or, in more desperate cases, by the order of a quaestor.
Some may have been as innocent as those I had lured, and might have been lured by other girls, such as I, and others might have been murderers and brigands, suitably enchained for the expiation of sentences, their custody having been legally transferred to Ionicus, my master, at the payment of a prisoner's fee, by the writ of a praetor or, in more desperate cases, by the order of a quaestor.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 24, Sentence #343)
Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
24
340
I saw I did not need to fear him, save in the ways any slave must fear a master.
24
341
I danced then to those whose eyes were hardest.
24
342
Some of them were not even men I had trapped, but only men who knew what I had done.
24
343
Some may have been as innocent as those I had lured, and might have been lured by other girls, such as I, and others might have been murderers and brigands, suitably enchained for the expiation of sentences, their custody having been legally transferred to Ionicus, my master, at the payment of a prisoner's fee, by the writ of a praetor or, in more desperate cases, by the order of a quaestor.
24
344
I danced abjectly.
24
345
I danced piteously.
24
346
I danced beggingly.
I saw I did not need to fear him, save in the ways any slave must fear a master.
I danced then to those whose eyes were hardest.
Some of them were not even men I had trapped, but only men who knew what I had done.
Some may have been as innocent as those I had lured, and might have been lured by other girls, such as I, and others might have been murderers and brigands, suitably enchained for the expiation of sentences, their custody having been legally transferred to Ionicus, my master, at the payment of a prisoner's fee, by the writ of a praetor or, in more desperate cases, by the order of a quaestor.
I danced abjectly.
I danced piteously.
I danced beggingly.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 24)