Book 5. (1 results) Assassin of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
19
430
The auctioneer signaled to the Musicians again and once more, to the shouts of the crowd, while he held open his hand, not yet closing it, taking bids, the girls performed the last moments of Ar's dance of the newly collared slave girl, who dances her joy at the thought that she will soon be in the arms of a strong master.
The auctioneer signaled to the Musicians again and once more, to the shouts of the crowd, while he held open his hand, not yet closing it, taking bids, the girls performed the last moments of Ar's dance of the newly collared slave girl, who dances her joy at the thought that she will soon be in the arms of a strong master.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 19, Sentence #430)
Book 5. (7 results) Assassin of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
19
427
"Eight hundred gold pieces!" came one cry.
19
428
"Eight hundred and fifty," came another.
19
429
Then we heard nine hundred and fifty bid, and then, incredibly, a thousand, and then a bid for the astounding sum of fourteen hundred pieces of gold.
19
430
The auctioneer signaled to the Musicians again and once more, to the shouts of the crowd, while he held open his hand, not yet closing it, taking bids, the girls performed the last moments of Ar's dance of the newly collared slave girl, who dances her joy at the thought that she will soon be in the arms of a strong master.
19
431
When the dance ended the three girls, slaves, knelt in the position of submission, arms extended, heads lowered, wrists crossed as though for binding; Elizabeth knelt facing the crowd and, perpendicular to her, on her left and right, knelt Virginia and Phyllis, a vulnerable, submitted flower of slave girls.
19
432
The auctioneer waited for some minutes for the acclaim of the crowd to subside.
19
433
The last bid he had received had been an astounding fifteen hundred pieces of gold.
"Eight hundred gold pieces!" came one cry.
"Eight hundred and fifty," came another.
Then we heard nine hundred and fifty bid, and then, incredibly, a thousand, and then a bid for the astounding sum of fourteen hundred pieces of gold.
The auctioneer signaled to the Musicians again and once more, to the shouts of the crowd, while he held open his hand, not yet closing it, taking bids, the girls performed the last moments of Ar's dance of the newly collared slave girl, who dances her joy at the thought that she will soon be in the arms of a strong master.
When the dance ended the three girls, slaves, knelt in the position of submission, arms extended, heads lowered, wrists crossed as though for binding; Elizabeth knelt facing the crowd and, perpendicular to her, on her left and right, knelt Virginia and Phyllis, a vulnerable, submitted flower of slave girls.
The auctioneer waited for some minutes for the acclaim of the crowd to subside.
The last bid he had received had been an astounding fifteen hundred pieces of gold.
- (Assassin of Gor, Chapter 19)