Let her, then, be sold for her theft, and it would, indeed, follow that she should be, viz.: If a son, whose father is not permitted to sell him, is sold for his theft, then a daughter, whose father is permitted to sell her, how much more so should be sold for her theft! — No, this may be true of a son, whose ear is bored, wherefore he is sold for his theft, as opposed to a daughter, whose ear is not bored, wherefore she is not sold for her theft.