Book 11. (7 results) Slave Girl of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
166
After we were cleaned we were leashed and exercised for a few minutes on the deck.
16
167
Then each of us, for the remainder of our time on deck, the precious half of an Ahn, was chained in a kneeling position, our hands before our bodies.
16
168
I had been taken by Tellius, the henchman of the Lady Elicia of Ar, by tarn, to Schendi.
16
169
This infamous port is the home port of the famed black slavers of Schendi, a league of slavers well known for their cruel depredations on shipping, but it is also a free port, administered by black merchants, and its fine harbor and its inland markets to the north and east attract much commerce.
16
170
It is thought that an agreement exists between the merchants of Schendi and the members of the league of black slavers, though I know of few who have proclaimed this publicly in Schendi and lived.
16
171
The evidence, if evidence it is that such an agreement exists, is that the black slavers tend to avoid preying on shipping which plies to and from Schendi.
16
172
They conduct their work commonly in more northern waters, returning to Schendi as their home port.
After we were cleaned we were leashed and exercised for a few minutes on the deck.
Then each of us, for the remainder of our time on deck, the precious half of an Ahn, was chained in a kneeling position, our hands before our bodies.
I had been taken by Tellius, the henchman of the Lady Elicia of Ar, by tarn, to Schendi.
This infamous port is the home port of the famed black slavers of Schendi, a league of slavers well known for their cruel depredations on shipping, but it is also a free port, administered by black merchants, and its fine harbor and its inland markets to the north and east attract much commerce.
It is thought that an agreement exists between the merchants of Schendi and the members of the league of black slavers, though I know of few who have proclaimed this publicly in Schendi and lived.
The evidence, if evidence it is that such an agreement exists, is that the black slavers tend to avoid preying on shipping which plies to and from Schendi.
They conduct their work commonly in more northern waters, returning to Schendi as their home port.
- (Slave Girl of Gor, Chapter )