Book 34. (7 results) Plunder of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
52
46
And many of these men, these intelligent, powerful, virile brutes, these men who carried the blood of masters in their veins, seemed to prefer Paula! It was she they wanted at their feet! Indeed, Paula had sold for a golden tarsk, had been bought from the central block of the great Curulean auction house itself.
52
47
On the other hand, I had gathered that two silver tarsks might be a good price for me, indeed, a splendid price for me! I suppose I was jealous of Paula.
52
48
I did not care for our roles to be reversed.
52
49
Was she truly such a "collared Ubara," and I little more, if that, than a pot girl, or a kettle-and-mat girl? To be sure, few pot girls or kettle-and-mat girls would go for, say, two silver tarsks! In any event, following the abduction of Lyris and, far more importantly, the extraction of the Lady Bina from the House of a Hundred Corridors, consternation, and fury, must have reigned in the enemy's camp.
52
50
I doubted that Kurii brooked frustration with equanimity.
52
51
The savagery, and rage, of such beasts was a most fearful prospect to consider.
52
52
Lord Agamemnon, if he were truly about, a living brain, unbodied, might howl through the speakers of his sophisticated ensconcement.
And many of these men, these intelligent, powerful, virile brutes, these men who carried the blood of masters in their veins, seemed to prefer Paula! It was she they wanted at their feet! Indeed, Paula had sold for a golden tarsk, had been bought from the central block of the great Curulean auction house itself.
On the other hand, I had gathered that two silver tarsks might be a good price for me, indeed, a splendid price for me! I suppose I was jealous of Paula.
I did not care for our roles to be reversed.
Was she truly such a "collared Ubara," and I little more, if that, than a pot girl, or a kettle-and-mat girl? To be sure, few pot girls or kettle-and-mat girls would go for, say, two silver tarsks! In any event, following the abduction of Lyris and, far more importantly, the extraction of the Lady Bina from the House of a Hundred Corridors, consternation, and fury, must have reigned in the enemy's camp.
I doubted that Kurii brooked frustration with equanimity.
The savagery, and rage, of such beasts was a most fearful prospect to consider.
Lord Agamemnon, if he were truly about, a living brain, unbodied, might howl through the speakers of his sophisticated ensconcement.
- (Plunder of Gor, Chapter )