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"law " "gor "

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
8 237 Among the wagons he was nothing.
8 238 He did what work he could, helping with the bosk, for a piece of meat from a cooking pot.
8 239 He was called Harold, which is not a Tuchuk name, nor a name used among the Wagon Peoples, though it is similar to some of the Kassar names.
8 240 It was an English name, but such are not unknown on gor, having been passed down, perhaps, for more than a thousand years, the name of an ancestor, perhaps brought to gor by Priest-Kings in what might have been the early Middle Ages of Earth.
8 241 I knew the Voyages of Acquisition were of even much greater antiquity.
8 242 I had determined, of course, to my satisfaction, having spoken with him once, that the boy, or young man, was indeed gorean; his people and their people before them and as far back as anyone knew had been, as it is said, of the Wagons.
8 243 The problem of the young man, and perhaps the reason that he had not yet won even the Courage Scar of the Tuchuks, was that he had fallen into the hands of Turian raiders in his youth and had spent several years in the city; in his adolescence he had, at great risk to himself, escaped from the city and made his way with great hardships across the plains to rejoin his people; they, of course, to his great disappointment, had not accepted him, regarding him as more Turian than Tuchuk.
Among the wagons he was nothing. He did what work he could, helping with the bosk, for a piece of meat from a cooking pot. He was called Harold, which is not a Tuchuk name, nor a name used among the Wagon Peoples, though it is similar to some of the Kassar names. It was an English name, but such are not unknown on gor, having been passed down, perhaps, for more than a thousand years, the name of an ancestor, perhaps brought to gor by Priest-Kings in what might have been the early Middle Ages of Earth. I knew the Voyages of Acquisition were of even much greater antiquity. I had determined, of course, to my satisfaction, having spoken with him once, that the boy, or young man, was indeed gorean; his people and their people before them and as far back as anyone knew had been, as it is said, of the Wagons. The problem of the young man, and perhaps the reason that he had not yet won even the Courage Scar of the Tuchuks, was that he had fallen into the hands of Turian raiders in his youth and had spent several years in the city; in his adolescence he had, at great risk to himself, escaped from the city and made his way with great hardships across the plains to rejoin his people; they, of course, to his great disappointment, had not accepted him, regarding him as more Turian than Tuchuk. - (Nomads of Gor, Chapter )