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Book 34. (7 results) Plunder of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
11 35 The bars of the cage had not been bent, but only prodded, which suggested the fish had been more curious than driven with the frenzy of hunger.
11 36 One of the dealer's men told of occasions in which a cage had required considerable repair following the onslaught of one or more such fish.
11 37 In each case, however, the slave, within the battered device, safe within the bars, had escaped harm.
11 38 Such things, I gathered, presented their greatest danger to captured free women, from enemy cities.
11 39 Uneasily, I heard recounted occasions, in one venue, or another, of the harrows that might face such women who, being beyond price, are accordingly worthless.
11 40 At least one has a sense of what a slave will bring.
11 41 A free woman, stripped and bound, watches the water, and then, when the large, narrow, triangular, dorsal fins of the sharks cleave the water, men lift her, to cast her into the sea; on other occasions, she might, suspended by the wrists, be lowered, bit by bit, into a pit of starving urts who will feed on her, inch by inch; other unpleasant fates involve the fangs of sleen and the wicked hollow thorns of well-rooted, matted, leech plants.
The bars of the cage had not been bent, but only prodded, which suggested the fish had been more curious than driven with the frenzy of hunger. One of the dealer's men told of occasions in which a cage had required considerable repair following the onslaught of one or more such fish. In each case, however, the slave, within the battered device, safe within the bars, had escaped harm. Such things, I gathered, presented their greatest danger to captured free women, from enemy cities. Uneasily, I heard recounted occasions, in one venue, or another, of the harrows that might face such women who, being beyond price, are accordingly worthless. At least one has a sense of what a slave will bring. A free woman, stripped and bound, watches the water, and then, when the large, narrow, triangular, dorsal fins of the sharks cleave the water, men lift her, to cast her into the sea; on other occasions, she might, suspended by the wrists, be lowered, bit by bit, into a pit of starving urts who will feed on her, inch by inch; other unpleasant fates involve the fangs of sleen and the wicked hollow thorns of well-rooted, matted, leech plants. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter )