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"flame " "death "

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
33 643 She was now silent, hooded, bound, and on the leash, fearing perhaps to be further struck.
33 644 I understood little, if anything, of what had occurred.
33 645 She had not been killed.
33 646 Not her death then, but her acquisition, it seemed, had been the object of the dreadful intrusion.
33 647 But what could they want of her? Of what value could she be to them, or to anyone? How could she, or it, such a thing, figure in the plans of rational beasts? Then I realized, shaken, that she might be a female, as Kurik had said.
33 648 Might this not be relevant then, somehow? Surely there are better things to do with a female than kill her.
33 649 Is it not true? One does not kill the female animal.
She was now silent, hooded, bound, and on the leash, fearing perhaps to be further struck. I understood little, if anything, of what had occurred. She had not been killed. Not her death then, but her acquisition, it seemed, had been the object of the dreadful intrusion. But what could they want of her? Of what value could she be to them, or to anyone? How could she, or it, such a thing, figure in the plans of rational beasts? Then I realized, shaken, that she might be a female, as Kurik had said. Might this not be relevant then, somehow? Surely there are better things to do with a female than kill her. Is it not true? One does not kill the female animal. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter )