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"knots "

Book 30. (1 results) Mariners of Gor (Individual Quote)

I took the key to the collar, which I had hidden in my tunic, and, using it as a wedge, and then as a tiny saw, attacked the knots first, and then the cord itself. - (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 3, Sentence #646)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
3 646 I took the key to the collar, which I had hidden in my tunic, and, using it as a wedge, and then as a tiny saw, attacked the knots first, and then the cord itself.

Book 30. (7 results) Mariners of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
3 643 I suspected that many were proscribed free women who had stripped, knelt, and embonded themselves before mercenaries, perhaps only shortly before, that they might be saved, that they might be taken from the city, if only as nude slaves.
3 644 Fighting was then about me.
3 645 I could not undo the knots.
3 646 I took the key to the collar, which I had hidden in my tunic, and, using it as a wedge, and then as a tiny saw, attacked the knots first, and then the cord itself.
3 647 The cord was not the ropage which might be used to bind a man, but much smaller, and weaker.
3 648 A strong man might have snapped it in two, but it was quite sufficient, as might have been a lace, to bind a woman, and with perfection.
3 649 I wept with misery that we could find ourselves so easily, and so helplessly, in the power of men.
I suspected that many were proscribed free women who had stripped, knelt, and embonded themselves before mercenaries, perhaps only shortly before, that they might be saved, that they might be taken from the city, if only as nude slaves. Fighting was then about me. I could not undo the knots. I took the key to the collar, which I had hidden in my tunic, and, using it as a wedge, and then as a tiny saw, attacked the knots first, and then the cord itself. The cord was not the ropage which might be used to bind a man, but much smaller, and weaker. A strong man might have snapped it in two, but it was quite sufficient, as might have been a lace, to bind a woman, and with perfection. I wept with misery that we could find ourselves so easily, and so helplessly, in the power of men. - (Mariners of Gor, Chapter 3)