Book 36. (1 results) Avengers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
9
From the point of view of the tavern the girls cannot rise up and rush about, competing for desirable customers, this arrangement minimizing squabbles and altercations, sometimes resulting in bite wounds, scratch marks, and gouts of lost hair.
From the point of view of the tavern the girls cannot rise up and rush about, competing for desirable customers, this arrangement minimizing squabbles and altercations, sometimes resulting in bite wounds, scratch marks, and gouts of lost hair.
- (Avengers of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #9)
Book 36. (7 results) Avengers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
10
6
The chains were some four or five feet in length, and the rings were separated by a pace or so.
10
7
The length of the individual chains and the spacing of the rings allows the girls to better present themselves for consideration.
10
8
The chains, holding the girls in place, work out well for both the tavern and the patrons.
10
9
From the point of view of the tavern the girls cannot rise up and rush about, competing for desirable customers, this arrangement minimizing squabbles and altercations, sometimes resulting in bite wounds, scratch marks, and gouts of lost hair.
10
10
From the point of view of the patrons, on the other hand, the girls can be examined and assessed, one after another, in a serial, leisurely manner.
10
11
One picks as one pleases.
10
12
I had scarcely arrived at the display area, to peruse the still-available offerings of the tavern, when one of the girls, she, like the others this night, in a brief yellow tunic, slit at the left hip, startled, looking up, hurled herself prone on the floor, squirming forward on her belly, pulling against the chain and manacle, extending her right hand to me, piteously.
The chains were some four or five feet in length, and the rings were separated by a pace or so.
The length of the individual chains and the spacing of the rings allows the girls to better present themselves for consideration.
The chains, holding the girls in place, work out well for both the tavern and the patrons.
From the point of view of the tavern the girls cannot rise up and rush about, competing for desirable customers, this arrangement minimizing squabbles and altercations, sometimes resulting in bite wounds, scratch marks, and gouts of lost hair.
From the point of view of the patrons, on the other hand, the girls can be examined and assessed, one after another, in a serial, leisurely manner.
One picks as one pleases.
I had scarcely arrived at the display area, to peruse the still-available offerings of the tavern, when one of the girls, she, like the others this night, in a brief yellow tunic, slit at the left hip, startled, looking up, hurled herself prone on the floor, squirming forward on her belly, pulling against the chain and manacle, extending her right hand to me, piteously.
- (Avengers of Gor, Chapter 10)