• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"animals "

Book 4. (1 results) Nomads of Gor (Individual Quote)

The wagons are said to be countless, the animals without number. - (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 3, Sentence #126)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
3 126 The wagons are said to be countless, the animals without number.

Book 4. (7 results) Nomads of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
3 123 Soon the animals would be turned in on themselves, to mill together in knots, until they were stopped by the shaggy walls of their own kind, to stand and graze until the morning.
3 124 The wagons would, of course, follow the herds.
3 125 The herd forms both vanguard and rampart for the advance of the wagons.
3 126 The wagons are said to be countless, the animals without number.
3 127 Both of these claims are, of course, mistaken, and the Ubars of the Wagon Peoples know well each wagon and the number of branded beasts in the various herds; each herd is, incidentally, composed of several smaller herds, each watched over by its own riders.
3 128 The bellowing seemed now to come from the sky itself, like thunder, or from the horizon, like the breaking of an ocean into surf on the rocks of the shore.
3 129 It was like a sea or a vast natural phenomenon slowly approaching.
Soon the animals would be turned in on themselves, to mill together in knots, until they were stopped by the shaggy walls of their own kind, to stand and graze until the morning. The wagons would, of course, follow the herds. The herd forms both vanguard and rampart for the advance of the wagons. The wagons are said to be countless, the animals without number. Both of these claims are, of course, mistaken, and the Ubars of the Wagon Peoples know well each wagon and the number of branded beasts in the various herds; each herd is, incidentally, composed of several smaller herds, each watched over by its own riders. The bellowing seemed now to come from the sky itself, like thunder, or from the horizon, like the breaking of an ocean into surf on the rocks of the shore. It was like a sea or a vast natural phenomenon slowly approaching. - (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 3)