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"bina "

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

It must not be thought surprising that the Lady Bina had been deferred to, for she was a free woman. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #389)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 389 It must not be thought surprising that the Lady bina had been deferred to, for she was a free woman.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
1 386 Order, discipline, and precision are important in the closed environment of a ship.
1 387 I had removed her from her ring several times during the voyage.
1 388 The Lady bina, on the other hand, had been accorded quarters, as she had insisted, in the cabin of Peisistratus himself, the captain, who then, with her guard, Grendel, had bunked with his men.
1 389 It must not be thought surprising that the Lady bina had been deferred to, for she was a free woman.
1 390 The girl before me was fetching in the shipping tunic, but that was not surprising as such tunics, even such as hers, a shipping tunic, are not designed to conceal the charms of their occupant.
1 391 The Gorean slave tunic, incidentally, is a form of garment with several purposes.
1 392 In its revealing brevity and lightness it well marks the difference between the slave and the free woman, a difference of great consequence on Gor.
Order, discipline, and precision are important in the closed environment of a ship. I had removed her from her ring several times during the voyage. The Lady bina, on the other hand, had been accorded quarters, as she had insisted, in the cabin of Peisistratus himself, the captain, who then, with her guard, Grendel, had bunked with his men. It must not be thought surprising that the Lady bina had been deferred to, for she was a free woman. The girl before me was fetching in the shipping tunic, but that was not surprising as such tunics, even such as hers, a shipping tunic, are not designed to conceal the charms of their occupant. The Gorean slave tunic, incidentally, is a form of garment with several purposes. In its revealing brevity and lightness it well marks the difference between the slave and the free woman, a difference of great consequence on Gor. - (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter 1)