Book 29. (7 results) Swordsmen of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
5
542
I knew something of this.
5
543
She had once been captured and enslaved by the tarnsman, Rask, of Treve, but he, having become, however unaccountably, enamored of a blond barbarian slave named El-in-or, gave her to Verna, a leader of Panther Girls, who took her to the northern forests.
5
544
Later, on the northern coast, she was exposed for sale.
5
545
There she had come within the cognizance of a slaver, Samos, first Captain in the council of Captains of Port Kar.
5
546
Eager to escape the toils of her cruel mistresses, and hoping that she might be returned to civilization, and even freed, she had begged him to buy her.
5
547
And thusly had she performed a slave's act, begging to be purchased, for in this act one acknowledges oneself purchasable, and thus a slave.
5
548
I, later, at the time unable to walk, and muchly paralyzed by the poison of Sullius Maximus, encountered her in the house of Samos.
I knew something of this.
She had once been captured and enslaved by the tarnsman, Rask, of Treve, but he, having become, however unaccountably, enamored of a blond barbarian slave named El-in-or, gave her to Verna, a leader of Panther Girls, who took her to the northern forests.
Later, on the northern coast, she was exposed for sale.
There she had come within the cognizance of a slaver, Samos, first Captain in the council of Captains of Port Kar.
Eager to escape the toils of her cruel mistresses, and hoping that she might be returned to civilization, and even freed, she had begged him to buy her.
And thusly had she performed a slave's act, begging to be purchased, for in this act one acknowledges oneself purchasable, and thus a slave.
I, later, at the time unable to walk, and muchly paralyzed by the poison of Sullius Maximus, encountered her in the house of Samos.
- (Swordsmen of Gor, Chapter )