Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
63
80
Certainly the Lady bina would have welcomed any opportunity to escape.
Certainly the Lady Bina would have welcomed any opportunity to escape.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 63, Sentence #80)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
63
77
On the surface there seemed little that was rational here.
63
78
But there must be, he was sure, a concealed rationality, a rationality awaiting some intelligible elucidation.
63
79
Threads of thought, like strands in water, like half-visible snakes, coiled and uncoiled in Cabot's mind.
63
80
Certainly the Lady bina would have welcomed any opportunity to escape.
63
81
But she would have had to have help to effect her escape, help to elude her constraints, and presumably help to pass through the insurrectionists' lines.
63
82
There would thus have to be a purpose other than her own involved in all this.
63
83
And what purpose could that be? "Of what use could she now be to Agamemnon?" had asked a Kur.
On the surface there seemed little that was rational here.
But there must be, he was sure, a concealed rationality, a rationality awaiting some intelligible elucidation.
Threads of thought, like strands in water, like half-visible snakes, coiled and uncoiled in Cabot's mind.
Certainly the Lady bina would have welcomed any opportunity to escape.
But she would have had to have help to effect her escape, help to elude her constraints, and presumably help to pass through the insurrectionists' lines.
There would thus have to be a purpose other than her own involved in all this.
And what purpose could that be? "Of what use could she now be to Agamemnon?" had asked a Kur.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 63)