Book 6. (1 results) Raiders of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
15
267
Poor, scrawny, plain Luma, thought I, in her tunic of scribe's cloth, and collar! What a poor excuse for a paga slave she had been! Yet she had a brilliant mind for the accounts and business of a great house, and had much increased my fortunes.
Poor, scrawny, plain Luma, thought I, in her tunic of scribe's cloth, and collar! What a poor excuse for a paga slave she had been! Yet she had a brilliant mind for the accounts and business of a great house, and had much increased my fortunes.
- (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 15, Sentence #267)
Book 6. (7 results) Raiders of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
15
264
"Drink!" I cried.
15
265
And again goblets were lifted and clashed.
15
266
I looked down the long table, and, far to my right, sitting alone at the end of the long bench behind the table, was Luma, my slave and chief scribe.
15
267
Poor, scrawny, plain Luma, thought I, in her tunic of scribe's cloth, and collar! What a poor excuse for a paga slave she had been! Yet she had a brilliant mind for the accounts and business of a great house, and had much increased my fortunes.
15
268
So indebted to her was I that I had, this night, permitted her to sit at one end of the great table.
15
269
No free man, of course, would sit beside her.
15
270
Moreover, that my other scribes and retainers not be angered, I had had her put in slave bracelets, and about her neck had had fastened a chain, which was bolted into the heavy table.
"Drink!" I cried.
And again goblets were lifted and clashed.
I looked down the long table, and, far to my right, sitting alone at the end of the long bench behind the table, was Luma, my slave and chief scribe.
Poor, scrawny, plain Luma, thought I, in her tunic of scribe's cloth, and collar! What a poor excuse for a paga slave she had been! Yet she had a brilliant mind for the accounts and business of a great house, and had much increased my fortunes.
So indebted to her was I that I had, this night, permitted her to sit at one end of the great table.
No free man, of course, would sit beside her.
Moreover, that my other scribes and retainers not be angered, I had had her put in slave bracelets, and about her neck had had fastened a chain, which was bolted into the heavy table.
- (Raiders of Gor, Chapter 15)