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"honor "

Book 24. (1 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Individual Quote)

They kept him as he was for two or three days, teasing him, and making him suffer much, raising his anxieties that they might not be able to scrape together his redemption fee, or that they had done so, but had then lost it in gambling, and such things, and also discussing, as you might well imagine, the honor of the troop, and whether or not one who was so foolish as to have gotten himself into such a predicament should be redeemed at all. - (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #508)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 508 They kept him as he was for two or three days, teasing him, and making him suffer much, raising his anxieties that they might not be able to scrape together his redemption fee, or that they had done so, but had then lost it in gambling, and such things, and also discussing, as you might well imagine, the honor of the troop, and whether or not one who was so foolish as to have gotten himself into such a predicament should be redeemed at all.

Book 24. (7 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 505 "His fellows," said the man.
1 506 "Other tarnsmen in the command of Artemidorus, some days later, stopped at the inn.
1 507 They were much amused to find him in such straits.
1 508 They kept him as he was for two or three days, teasing him, and making him suffer much, raising his anxieties that they might not be able to scrape together his redemption fee, or that they had done so, but had then lost it in gambling, and such things, and also discussing, as you might well imagine, the honor of the troop, and whether or not one who was so foolish as to have gotten himself into such a predicament should be redeemed at all.
1 509 He roared and ranted much, you may not doubt, but what could he do, naked in a courtyard, in chains! In the end, of course, after obtaining promises of immunity from him for their jokes, they redeemed him, and he was released".
1 510 "Surely there must have been repercussions concerning the dispatches and such," I ventured.
1 511 "They were not important, it seems, but routine.
"His fellows," said the man. "Other tarnsmen in the command of Artemidorus, some days later, stopped at the inn. They were much amused to find him in such straits. They kept him as he was for two or three days, teasing him, and making him suffer much, raising his anxieties that they might not be able to scrape together his redemption fee, or that they had done so, but had then lost it in gambling, and such things, and also discussing, as you might well imagine, the honor of the troop, and whether or not one who was so foolish as to have gotten himself into such a predicament should be redeemed at all. He roared and ranted much, you may not doubt, but what could he do, naked in a courtyard, in chains! In the end, of course, after obtaining promises of immunity from him for their jokes, they redeemed him, and he was released". "Surely there must have been repercussions concerning the dispatches and such," I ventured. "They were not important, it seems, but routine. - (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 1)