Book 25. (1 results) Magicians of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
290
She had had light brown hair and had been excellently curved.
She had had light brown hair and had been excellently curved.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 3, Sentence #290)
Book 25. (7 results) Magicians of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
3
287
It was clearly a device designed for such a purpose.
3
288
The net and the room doubtless constituted a capture cubicle, simpler perhaps, but not unlike those in certain inns, in which a woman, lulled by the bolting on the doors, and feeling herself secure, may complete her toilet at leisure, bathing, combing her hair, perfuming herself and such, before the trap doors, dropped from beneath her, plunge her into the waiting arms of slavers.
3
289
Guardsmen and magistrates, I had noted, had been in immediate attendance.
3
290
She had had light brown hair and had been excellently curved.
3
291
Yet I did not doubt but what her figure, even then of great interest, would be soon improved by diet and exercise, certainly before she would be put upon the block.
3
292
To one side, in the half darkness, I heard the grunting of a man, and a female's gasping, and sobbing.
3
293
There, to one side, in the shadows, difficult to make out, a slave girl, I could see the glint of her collar, writhed in a fellow's arms.
It was clearly a device designed for such a purpose.
The net and the room doubtless constituted a capture cubicle, simpler perhaps, but not unlike those in certain inns, in which a woman, lulled by the bolting on the doors, and feeling herself secure, may complete her toilet at leisure, bathing, combing her hair, perfuming herself and such, before the trap doors, dropped from beneath her, plunge her into the waiting arms of slavers.
Guardsmen and magistrates, I had noted, had been in immediate attendance.
She had had light brown hair and had been excellently curved.
Yet I did not doubt but what her figure, even then of great interest, would be soon improved by diet and exercise, certainly before she would be put upon the block.
To one side, in the half darkness, I heard the grunting of a man, and a female's gasping, and sobbing.
There, to one side, in the shadows, difficult to make out, a slave girl, I could see the glint of her collar, writhed in a fellow's arms.
- (Magicians of Gor, Chapter 3)