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"customs "

Book 32. (1 results) Smugglers of Gor (Individual Quote)

With the prisoners, however, I expected that this behavior was less to be attributed to the customs and decorum of the cotfle, instilled in coffle beasts, than an apprehension of the gauntlet through which they, cofifled, were passing. - (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 39, Sentence #462)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
39 462 With the prisoners, however, I expected that this behavior was less to be attributed to the customs and decorum of the cotfle, instilled in coffle beasts, than an apprehension of the gauntlet through which they, cofifled, were passing.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
39 459 The attention of coffle beasts is not to rove about.
39 460 They are not free persons.
39 461 Too, in this way they are less likely to make eye contact with a free person.
39 462 With the prisoners, however, I expected that this behavior was less to be attributed to the customs and decorum of the cotfle, instilled in coffle beasts, than an apprehension of the gauntlet through which they, cofifled, were passing.
39 463 Certainly they knew they were under the scrutiny of men, though the scrutiny, for the most part, seemed to be relatively casual.
39 464 It was not as though they were prize kajirae, four-or-five-silver-tarsk girls, perhaps even some gold- piece girls, say, being disembarked from slave wagons, whose arrival in a city had been long awaited, perhaps even having been heralded by a great number of wall bills.
39 465 "Oh!" cried Emerald, startled.
The attention of coffle beasts is not to rove about. They are not free persons. Too, in this way they are less likely to make eye contact with a free person. With the prisoners, however, I expected that this behavior was less to be attributed to the customs and decorum of the cotfle, instilled in coffle beasts, than an apprehension of the gauntlet through which they, cofifled, were passing. Certainly they knew they were under the scrutiny of men, though the scrutiny, for the most part, seemed to be relatively casual. It was not as though they were prize kajirae, four-or-five-silver-tarsk girls, perhaps even some gold- piece girls, say, being disembarked from slave wagons, whose arrival in a city had been long awaited, perhaps even having been heralded by a great number of wall bills. "Oh!" cried Emerald, startled. - (Smugglers of Gor, Chapter 39)