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"appeal "

Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)

She was doubtless trying to explain, too, that some terrible mistake had been made, that there must be someone to whom to appeal, and so on. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #825)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 825 She was doubtless trying to explain, too, that some terrible mistake had been made, that there must be someone to whom to appeal, and so on.

Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 822 In any event, the fact that the female spoke his native tongue, as well as the hitherto noted excellencies of her face and figure, which seemed customized, so to speak, to his own tastes, informed him, as he had suspected, that her presence, and doubtless, too, that of the blonde, in the container, was not a matter of mere happenstance, but had some role to play in the designs of Priest-Kings.
1 823 Certainly he did not think, as we had originally supposed, that they were some sort of gift to him, or even a mere concession to one of his appetites.
1 824 The woman meanwhile, finding herself understood, shook with emotion, and, sobbing with unspeakable relief, eagerly, gratefully, neglecting to request permission, began to speak, enunciating what must have been a torrent of solicitations, questions, inquiries, demands, protests, and such, which was surely understandable.
1 825 She was doubtless trying to explain, too, that some terrible mistake had been made, that there must be someone to whom to appeal, and so on.
1 826 The fact that she had not requested permission to speak, at least at such length, doubtless seemed anomalous to Tarl Cabot.
1 827 It was almost as though she might be a free woman, and not a slave.
1 828 But he was tolerant, at least for a time, of her effusive excesses, doubtless taking into consideration her confusion and dismay, given her presumably recent entrapment and her present circumstances.
In any event, the fact that the female spoke his native tongue, as well as the hitherto noted excellencies of her face and figure, which seemed customized, so to speak, to his own tastes, informed him, as he had suspected, that her presence, and doubtless, too, that of the blonde, in the container, was not a matter of mere happenstance, but had some role to play in the designs of Priest-Kings. Certainly he did not think, as we had originally supposed, that they were some sort of gift to him, or even a mere concession to one of his appetites. The woman meanwhile, finding herself understood, shook with emotion, and, sobbing with unspeakable relief, eagerly, gratefully, neglecting to request permission, began to speak, enunciating what must have been a torrent of solicitations, questions, inquiries, demands, protests, and such, which was surely understandable. She was doubtless trying to explain, too, that some terrible mistake had been made, that there must be someone to whom to appeal, and so on. The fact that she had not requested permission to speak, at least at such length, doubtless seemed anomalous to Tarl Cabot. It was almost as though she might be a free woman, and not a slave. But he was tolerant, at least for a time, of her effusive excesses, doubtless taking into consideration her confusion and dismay, given her presumably recent entrapment and her present circumstances. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 1)