Book 24. (1 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
589
This proving unavailing he had had them stripped and searched by powerful freewomen and then returned to the cage, on the bench much as before, though now unclothed and absolutely coinless.
This proving unavailing he had had them stripped and searched by powerful free women and then returned to the cage, on the bench much as before, though now unclothed and absolutely coinless.
- (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #589)
Book 24. (7 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
586
She, like the others, however, when I had met her, probably due to the war, the scarcity of genteel travelers, the crowds of impoverished refugees, the high prices, and so on, had fallen on hard times.
1
587
Their bills unpaid, and their evasions not satisfying the inn's attendants, they had been taken, ropes on their necks, before the keeper.
1
588
He had put them on a bench in a wheeled cage, honorably clothed, near the checkout desk, where they might importune men to pay their bills.
1
589
This proving unavailing he had had them stripped and searched by powerful freewomen and then returned to the cage, on the bench much as before, though now unclothed and absolutely coinless.
1
590
Later he had had them taken from the cage and ankle-tied, on their knees, near the checkout desk, their hands freed that they might the more piteously and meaningfully supplicate guests of the inn.
1
591
At the seventeenth Ahn the keeper, perhaps tiring of their presence near his desk, and despairing of them being immediately redeemed, had had them cleared away.
1
592
For the first time in their lives they had then worn chains.
She, like the others, however, when I had met her, probably due to the war, the scarcity of genteel travelers, the crowds of impoverished refugees, the high prices, and so on, had fallen on hard times.
Their bills unpaid, and their evasions not satisfying the inn's attendants, they had been taken, ropes on their necks, before the keeper.
He had put them on a bench in a wheeled cage, honorably clothed, near the checkout desk, where they might importune men to pay their bills.
This proving unavailing he had had them stripped and searched by powerful free women and then returned to the cage, on the bench much as before, though now unclothed and absolutely coinless.
Later he had had them taken from the cage and ankle-tied, on their knees, near the checkout desk, their hands freed that they might the more piteously and meaningfully supplicate guests of the inn.
At the seventeenth Ahn the keeper, perhaps tiring of their presence near his desk, and despairing of them being immediately redeemed, had had them cleared away.
For the first time in their lives they had then worn chains.
- (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 1)