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"locks "

Book 11. (1 results) Slave Girl of Gor (Individual Quote)

When I had flung down the vertically sliding gate behind me, two notched projections, bolts, welded to the flat bar at the gate's bottom had slipped into iron-enclosed spring catches, heavy locks, one on the bottom left, one on the bottle right, the gate being thus secured. - (Slave Girl of Gor, Chapter 8, Sentence #27)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 27 When I had flung down the vertically sliding gate behind me, two notched projections, bolts, welded to the flat bar at the gate's bottom had slipped into iron-enclosed spring catches, heavy locks, one on the bottom left, one on the bottle right, the gate being thus secured.

Book 11. (7 results) Slave Girl of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 24 "Excellent," said Clitus Vitellius.
8 25 I knelt in the slave cage, my hands on its bars.
8 26 I had locked myself in the slave cage.
8 27 When I had flung down the vertically sliding gate behind me, two notched projections, bolts, welded to the flat bar at the gate's bottom had slipped into iron-enclosed spring catches, heavy locks, one on the bottom left, one on the bottle right, the gate being thus secured.
8 28 I could not open these locks.
8 29 They responded to a key, slung on the string about the neck of Thurnus.
8 30 It is necessary to engage the locks not only because the animal follows so closely and the gate must be swiftly lowered, but because if the locks are not engaged, it will thrust its snout beneath the bottom of the gate, between the bottom of the gate and the floor of the cage, and, throwing its head up, fling up the gate, and have access to the cage's occupant.
"Excellent," said Clitus Vitellius. I knelt in the slave cage, my hands on its bars. I had locked myself in the slave cage. When I had flung down the vertically sliding gate behind me, two notched projections, bolts, welded to the flat bar at the gate's bottom had slipped into iron-enclosed spring catches, heavy locks, one on the bottom left, one on the bottle right, the gate being thus secured. I could not open these locks. They responded to a key, slung on the string about the neck of Thurnus. It is necessary to engage the locks not only because the animal follows so closely and the gate must be swiftly lowered, but because if the locks are not engaged, it will thrust its snout beneath the bottom of the gate, between the bottom of the gate and the floor of the cage, and, throwing its head up, fling up the gate, and have access to the cage's occupant. - (Slave Girl of Gor, Chapter 8)