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"caste " "sanctuary "

Book 32. (7 results) Smugglers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
15 160 It was she who had fled toward the stairs in the dungeon, but had been precluded from reaching them by one of our keepers.
15 161 She had looked well on her knees, licking and kissing a man's feet, in gratitude for not having been beaten.
15 162 Prior to this experience she had been insufferably proud, and arrogant, at least with some of us, though not daring this with the masters, and was certainly so with myself, for I was only a barbarian.
15 163 She had apparently once been of the Merchants, perhaps the high Merchants, and had even held herself to be of high caste, despite the fact that few Goreans accepted the Merchants as a high caste.
15 164 It was regarded as a rich caste, but that is not, in the eyes of many, the same as being a high caste.
15 165 It was, of course, a powerful caste, given its wealth, and even Ubars might court its favor.
15 166 How are men to be paid, and wars waged, if not with gold? In any event, she who had once been "Eighteen" had now changed considerably, and surely was now better aware of the meaning of the mark which had been burned into her left thigh, just under the hip.
It was she who had fled toward the stairs in the dungeon, but had been precluded from reaching them by one of our keepers. She had looked well on her knees, licking and kissing a man's feet, in gratitude for not having been beaten. Prior to this experience she had been insufferably proud, and arrogant, at least with some of us, though not daring this with the masters, and was certainly so with myself, for I was only a barbarian. She had apparently once been of the Merchants, perhaps the high Merchants, and had even held herself to be of high caste, despite the fact that few Goreans accepted the Merchants as a high caste. It was regarded as a rich caste, but that is not, in the eyes of many, the same as being a high caste. It was, of course, a powerful caste, given its wealth, and even Ubars might court its favor. How are men to be paid, and wars waged, if not with gold? In any event, she who had once been "Eighteen" had now changed considerably, and surely was now better aware of the meaning of the mark which had been burned into her left thigh, just under the hip. - (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter )