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"free " "companion "

Book 10. (1 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Individual Quote)

Following me down the gangplank, clad in a black haik, could have been only my companion, the pitiful free woman who shared my poverty. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 2, Sentence #175)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
2 175 Following me down the gangplank, clad in a black haik, could have been only my companion, the pitiful free woman who shared my poverty.

Book 10. (7 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
2 172 I wore now the rags of a drover of kaiila.
2 173 Bent over, carrying a grossly woven bag of kaiila-hair cloth, filled with accouterments, I set foot on the cracked boards of the Kurtzal dock.
2 174 Moments later I stood inland, ankle deep in the white dust.
2 175 Following me down the gangplank, clad in a black haik, could have been only my companion, the pitiful free woman who shared my poverty.
2 176 The haik, black, covers the woman from head to toe.
2 177 At the eyes, there is a tiny bit of black lace, through which she may see.
2 178 On her feet were soft, black, nonheeled slippers, with curled toes; they were decorated with a line of silver thread.
I wore now the rags of a drover of kaiila. Bent over, carrying a grossly woven bag of kaiila-hair cloth, filled with accouterments, I set foot on the cracked boards of the Kurtzal dock. Moments later I stood inland, ankle deep in the white dust. Following me down the gangplank, clad in a black haik, could have been only my companion, the pitiful free woman who shared my poverty. The haik, black, covers the woman from head to toe. At the eyes, there is a tiny bit of black lace, through which she may see. On her feet were soft, black, nonheeled slippers, with curled toes; they were decorated with a line of silver thread. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 2)