Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
16
Certainly she held the human animals of the forest, prey animals, as worthy of little respect, saving how they might constitute for her a dreadful imperilment.
Certainly she held the human animals of the forest, prey animals, as worthy of little respect, saving how they might constitute for her a dreadful imperilment.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 16, Sentence #16)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
13
It seemed she had not yet learned docility and terror in the presence of a man.
16
14
Such characteristics would doubtless have been elicited in the presence of a form of life with which she was more familiar.
16
15
As a complacent and arrogant pet of Kurii, and priding herself as such, a species so superior on the Steel World, she was inclined on the whole to be contemptuous of her own species, which she understood, perhaps appropriately, as an inferior life form.
16
16
Certainly she held the human animals of the forest, prey animals, as worthy of little respect, saving how they might constitute for her a dreadful imperilment.
16
17
Surely she remembered the pointed stick, and how she might have been fixed by it to the earth of a primitive camp.
16
18
Cabot had tied her in a way acceptable for a free woman.
16
19
He had not tied her as she might have been tied, had she been a slave.
It seemed she had not yet learned docility and terror in the presence of a man.
Such characteristics would doubtless have been elicited in the presence of a form of life with which she was more familiar.
As a complacent and arrogant pet of Kurii, and priding herself as such, a species so superior on the Steel World, she was inclined on the whole to be contemptuous of her own species, which she understood, perhaps appropriately, as an inferior life form.
Certainly she held the human animals of the forest, prey animals, as worthy of little respect, saving how they might constitute for her a dreadful imperilment.
Surely she remembered the pointed stick, and how she might have been fixed by it to the earth of a primitive camp.
Cabot had tied her in a way acceptable for a free woman.
He had not tied her as she might have been tied, had she been a slave.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 16)