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"archon "

Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)

"What did you say?" asked Archon. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 64, Sentence #31)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
64 31 "What did you say?" asked archon.

Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
64 28 "I could not sell her for a pot girl, let alone a kettle-and-mat girl," said Peisistratus.
64 29 "She is good for nothing now but sleen feed, if that".
64 30 "She was refusing to eat," said Statius, "until our friend Cabot spoke to her".
64 31 "What did you say?" asked archon.
64 32 "Not a great deal," said Cabot.
64 33 "I merely informed her that if she did not eat she would be stripped and lashed, and then force fed, as might be a slave, and that her hands would be fastened behind her, that she not be able to rid herself of the food, that she would not be permitted to starve herself any more than a new slave, who does not yet understand that the will is her master's and not hers, one who does not yet understand fully, as she shortly will, that such things are not permitted to her, and that she is truly a slave, is to be treated as such, and will be treated as such, in short, that she is no longer hers, but is now the master's, that she is now property, his property".
64 34 "And Lord Grendel permitted this?" said Statius.
"I could not sell her for a pot girl, let alone a kettle-and-mat girl," said Peisistratus. "She is good for nothing now but sleen feed, if that". "She was refusing to eat," said Statius, "until our friend Cabot spoke to her". "What did you say?" asked archon. "Not a great deal," said Cabot. "I merely informed her that if she did not eat she would be stripped and lashed, and then force fed, as might be a slave, and that her hands would be fastened behind her, that she not be able to rid herself of the food, that she would not be permitted to starve herself any more than a new slave, who does not yet understand that the will is her master's and not hers, one who does not yet understand fully, as she shortly will, that such things are not permitted to her, and that she is truly a slave, is to be treated as such, and will be treated as such, in short, that she is no longer hers, but is now the master's, that she is now property, his property". "And Lord Grendel permitted this?" said Statius. - (Kur of Gor, Chapter 64)