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"bina "

Book 29. (1 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Individual Quote)

"When Peisistratus disembarks the Lady Bina and Lord Grendel," she said, "whence then he?" "He will undoubtedly continue his work," I said. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #144)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 144 "When Peisistratus disembarks the Lady bina and Lord Grendel," she said, "whence then he?" "He will undoubtedly continue his work," I said.

Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 141 To be sure, I had often thought that the Lady bina would herself look quite well in a collar.
1 142 How did she expect to become a Ubara? She did not even have a Home Stone.
1 143 And there was a Ubara in Ar, if only a Cosian puppet on the throne, Talena, a traitress to her Home Stone, Talena, once the daughter of the great Ubar, Marlenus of Ar, whose whereabouts, as far as I knew, were unknown.
1 144 "When Peisistratus disembarks the Lady bina and Lord Grendel," she said, "whence then he?" "He will undoubtedly continue his work," I said.
1 145 I did not elaborate on the nature of his work, but she was substantially familiar with it.
1 146 Peisistratus, and his crews, were in their way mariners and merchants.
1 147 He doubtless had one or more bases, or ports, on Earth, and one or more on Gor, and I knew he had one on the Steel World from which we had been brought, that now under the governance of Arcesilaus, now theocrat of that world, and now, claimedly, Twelfth Face of the Nameless One.
To be sure, I had often thought that the Lady bina would herself look quite well in a collar. How did she expect to become a Ubara? She did not even have a Home Stone. And there was a Ubara in Ar, if only a Cosian puppet on the throne, Talena, a traitress to her Home Stone, Talena, once the daughter of the great Ubar, Marlenus of Ar, whose whereabouts, as far as I knew, were unknown. "When Peisistratus disembarks the Lady bina and Lord Grendel," she said, "whence then he?" "He will undoubtedly continue his work," I said. I did not elaborate on the nature of his work, but she was substantially familiar with it. Peisistratus, and his crews, were in their way mariners and merchants. He doubtless had one or more bases, or ports, on Earth, and one or more on Gor, and I knew he had one on the Steel World from which we had been brought, that now under the governance of Arcesilaus, now theocrat of that world, and now, claimedly, Twelfth Face of the Nameless One. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 1)