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Book 27. (1 results) Prize of Gor (Individual Quote)

Two children, and, later, a free woman, were passed on the stairs. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30, Sentence #248)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
30 248 Two children, and, later, a free woman, were passed on the stairs.

Book 27. (7 results) Prize of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
30 245 On the other hand, it was seldom used.
30 246 A supple switch served sufficiently for occasional admonitions.
30 247 One time, however, several days ago, he did strip her, tie her wrists together before her body and conduct her down the stairs to the hall of the building, where it opened at the street level.
30 248 Two children, and, later, a free woman, were passed on the stairs.
30 249 None paid her attention.
30 250 Her master then tied her wrists over her head to a dangling ceiling ring in the hall, a ring for the use of the tenants, one not far from the door, and drew her up in such a way that she was stretched upward by the wrists, and standing on the tips of her toes.
30 251 "What have I done, Master?" she had asked in genuine puzzlement.
On the other hand, it was seldom used. A supple switch served sufficiently for occasional admonitions. One time, however, several days ago, he did strip her, tie her wrists together before her body and conduct her down the stairs to the hall of the building, where it opened at the street level. Two children, and, later, a free woman, were passed on the stairs. None paid her attention. Her master then tied her wrists over her head to a dangling ceiling ring in the hall, a ring for the use of the tenants, one not far from the door, and drew her up in such a way that she was stretched upward by the wrists, and standing on the tips of her toes. "What have I done, Master?" she had asked in genuine puzzlement. - (Prize of Gor, Chapter 30)