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"urt " "girls "

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
7 51 Lastly, the female slave is property, and such ships seldom carry cargo.
7 52 Too, such ships may enter battle, and the female slave, who surely has her value, such as it is, no more than other goods is to be put at risk.
7 53 Needless to say, at the voyages' end, such mariners, starved for the scent of perfume and the clasp of warm arms, are likely to lose little time in seeking the comforts of the taverns.
7 54 girls are often sent to the wharves, when ships are due, in camisks adorned with advertising, to solicit patronage for their masters' establishments.
7 55 I heard, again, the howling of a sleen.
7 56 I had not seen it, but, from the sound, I supposed it must be a large brute.
7 57 It carried from deck to deck.
Lastly, the female slave is property, and such ships seldom carry cargo. Too, such ships may enter battle, and the female slave, who surely has her value, such as it is, no more than other goods is to be put at risk. Needless to say, at the voyages' end, such mariners, starved for the scent of perfume and the clasp of warm arms, are likely to lose little time in seeking the comforts of the taverns. girls are often sent to the wharves, when ships are due, in camisks adorned with advertising, to solicit patronage for their masters' establishments. I heard, again, the howling of a sleen. I had not seen it, but, from the sound, I supposed it must be a large brute. It carried from deck to deck. - (Mariners of Gor, Chapter )