Book 4. (1 results) Nomads of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
6
13
Between the two animals, stumbling desperately, her throat bound by leather thongs to the lance behind her neck, ran a girl, her wrists tied behind her back.
Between the two animals, stumbling desperately, her throat bound by leather thongs to the lance behind her neck, ran a girl, her wrists tied behind her back.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #13)
Book 4. (7 results) Nomads of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
6
10
Now I could see down the wide, grassy lane, loping towards us, two kaiila and riders.
6
11
A lance was fastened between them, fixed to the stirrups of their saddles.
6
12
The lance cleared the ground, given the height of the kaiila, by about five feet.
6
13
Between the two animals, stumbling desperately, her throat bound by leather thongs to the lance behind her neck, ran a girl, her wrists tied behind her back.
6
14
I was astonished, for this girl was dressed not as a Gorean, not as a girl of any of the cities of the Counter-Earth, not as a peasant of the Sa-Tarna fields or the vineyards where the Ta grapes are raised, not even as a girl of the fierce Wagon Peoples.
6
15
Kamchak stepped to the center of the grassy lane, lifting his hand, and the two riders, with their prize, reined in their mounts.
6
16
I was dumbfounded.
Now I could see down the wide, grassy lane, loping towards us, two kaiila and riders.
A lance was fastened between them, fixed to the stirrups of their saddles.
The lance cleared the ground, given the height of the kaiila, by about five feet.
Between the two animals, stumbling desperately, her throat bound by leather thongs to the lance behind her neck, ran a girl, her wrists tied behind her back.
I was astonished, for this girl was dressed not as a Gorean, not as a girl of any of the cities of the Counter-Earth, not as a peasant of the Sa-Tarna fields or the vineyards where the Ta grapes are raised, not even as a girl of the fierce Wagon Peoples.
Kamchak stepped to the center of the grassy lane, lifting his hand, and the two riders, with their prize, reined in their mounts.
I was dumbfounded.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 6)