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"money "

Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)

I recalled that the porter, when I had come to the outer gate, at the height of the bridge over the moat, seeing that I was not a female, had made me show money, and a considerable amount of it, before he had admitted me. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #282)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
2 282 I recalled that the porter, when I had come to the outer gate, at the height of the bridge over the moat, seeing that I was not a female, had made me show money, and a considerable amount of it, before he had admitted me.

Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
2 279 The first woman gasped, startled, so referred to, and the second and third woman cried out in anger.
2 280 The fourth whimpered, knowing what I had said was true.
2 281 The fifth was silent.
2 282 I recalled that the porter, when I had come to the outer gate, at the height of the bridge over the moat, seeing that I was not a female, had made me show money, and a considerable amount of it, before he had admitted me.
2 283 This was probably because of the crowding at the inn, and perhaps inflated prices, in these unusual, perilous times.
2 284 Women, I had gathered, on the other hand, would not be required to show such money.
2 285 This, of course, was presumably not so much because such a challenge might be thought to be demeaning to a free woman, as, perhaps, that women on Gor, in a sense, are themselves money.
The first woman gasped, startled, so referred to, and the second and third woman cried out in anger. The fourth whimpered, knowing what I had said was true. The fifth was silent. I recalled that the porter, when I had come to the outer gate, at the height of the bridge over the moat, seeing that I was not a female, had made me show money, and a considerable amount of it, before he had admitted me. This was probably because of the crowding at the inn, and perhaps inflated prices, in these unusual, perilous times. Women, I had gathered, on the other hand, would not be required to show such money. This, of course, was presumably not so much because such a challenge might be thought to be demeaning to a free woman, as, perhaps, that women on Gor, in a sense, are themselves money. - (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 2)