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"possession "

Book 8. (1 results) Hunters of Gor (Individual Quote)

Even their ship was prize, the possession of which he had not disputed with one called Bosk of Port Kar, who had aided him. - (Hunters of Gor, Chapter 22, Sentence #582)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
22 582 Even their ship was prize, the possession of which he had not disputed with one called Bosk of Port Kar, who had aided him.

Book 8. (7 results) Hunters of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
22 579 He would bring with him as slave Hura and Mira, panther girl leaders, who had sought to accomplish dishonor upon him.
22 580 Several of their women, too, nude and chained, would grace his triumph as lovely slaves.
22 581 The men of Tyros, who had sought his capture, were mostly dead or to be sold as slaves.
22 582 Even their ship was prize, the possession of which he had not disputed with one called Bosk of Port Kar, who had aided him.
22 583 He had come to the forest to capture Verna and free the woman Talena.
22 584 He had succeeded in the first objective but had magnanimously, after first forcing her to serve him as a helpless, obedient slave girl, after sexually conquering her, freed her.
22 585 It was a gesture, was it not, worthy of a Ubar? As for the second objective, the freeing of the woman Talena, that was no longer important to him, no longer a worthy aim of a Ubar's act.
He would bring with him as slave Hura and Mira, panther girl leaders, who had sought to accomplish dishonor upon him. Several of their women, too, nude and chained, would grace his triumph as lovely slaves. The men of Tyros, who had sought his capture, were mostly dead or to be sold as slaves. Even their ship was prize, the possession of which he had not disputed with one called Bosk of Port Kar, who had aided him. He had come to the forest to capture Verna and free the woman Talena. He had succeeded in the first objective but had magnanimously, after first forcing her to serve him as a helpless, obedient slave girl, after sexually conquering her, freed her. It was a gesture, was it not, worthy of a Ubar? As for the second objective, the freeing of the woman Talena, that was no longer important to him, no longer a worthy aim of a Ubar's act. - (Hunters of Gor, Chapter 22)