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"slave " "sister "

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
40 5 I was very much afraid of free women.
40 6 I well remembered the free woman, slender, possibly lovely, veiled and robed, on the wharf in Victoria, who had, in her rage, at some conjectured insult, screaming, lashed the bars of my cage, for better than an Ehn, while I shrank back within it.
40 7 I had made the grievous error of appealing to her as though she might be concerned for a slave.
40 8 I had even, ignorantly, so haplessly, addressed her as "sister".
40 9 "Well?" she demanded.
40 10 The shop of the potter, Epicrates, like most Gorean shops, was open to the street during the day and would be closed at night, usually by means of heavy, folded wooden screens, secured with chains or rods.
40 11 I could see he whom I took to be Epicrates in the back of the shop, who had looked up from his wheel.
I was very much afraid of free women. I well remembered the free woman, slender, possibly lovely, veiled and robed, on the wharf in Victoria, who had, in her rage, at some conjectured insult, screaming, lashed the bars of my cage, for better than an Ehn, while I shrank back within it. I had made the grievous error of appealing to her as though she might be concerned for a slave. I had even, ignorantly, so haplessly, addressed her as "sister". "Well?" she demanded. The shop of the potter, Epicrates, like most Gorean shops, was open to the street during the day and would be closed at night, usually by means of heavy, folded wooden screens, secured with chains or rods. I could see he whom I took to be Epicrates in the back of the shop, who had looked up from his wheel. - (Plunder of Gor, Chapter )