Book 28. (1 results) Kur of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
64
154
"Begone, beast, monster," said Cestiphon, angrily, and the Lady bina, sobbing, clutching the sheet about her, fighting her shackles, moved away, as swiftly as she could.
"Begone, beast, monster," said Cestiphon, angrily, and the Lady Bina, sobbing, clutching the sheet about her, fighting her shackles, moved away, as swiftly as she could.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 64, Sentence #154)
Book 28. (7 results) Kur of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
64
151
The switch had done its work well, its supple, stinging slash, far better than its humble predecessor, the stick, which, less yielding, was more likely to damage a woman than punish and instruct her.
64
152
The stick was a makeshift device, crude and barbarous; the switch was an artifact, a boon of civilization, a tested, refined, efficient implement, one explicitly and intelligently designed for the management and improvement of slaves.
64
153
Cestiphon then picked up the sheet and threw it about the Lady bina, who gratefully, with her small, closely braceleted hands, clutched it about her.
64
154
"Begone, beast, monster," said Cestiphon, angrily, and the Lady bina, sobbing, clutching the sheet about her, fighting her shackles, moved away, as swiftly as she could.
64
155
Men withdrew from her course.
64
156
Female slaves slipped back, and knelt, their heads to the dirt, that she might pass, unimpeded.
64
157
The Lady bina was, you see, despite what might be her misfortunes or fate, a free woman, and thus a thousand times, and more, above them.
The switch had done its work well, its supple, stinging slash, far better than its humble predecessor, the stick, which, less yielding, was more likely to damage a woman than punish and instruct her.
The stick was a makeshift device, crude and barbarous; the switch was an artifact, a boon of civilization, a tested, refined, efficient implement, one explicitly and intelligently designed for the management and improvement of slaves.
Cestiphon then picked up the sheet and threw it about the Lady bina, who gratefully, with her small, closely braceleted hands, clutched it about her.
"Begone, beast, monster," said Cestiphon, angrily, and the Lady bina, sobbing, clutching the sheet about her, fighting her shackles, moved away, as swiftly as she could.
Men withdrew from her course.
Female slaves slipped back, and knelt, their heads to the dirt, that she might pass, unimpeded.
The Lady bina was, you see, despite what might be her misfortunes or fate, a free woman, and thus a thousand times, and more, above them.
- (Kur of Gor, Chapter 64)