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"tribes "

Book 17. (1 results) Savages of Gor (Individual Quote)

The same herd, thus, may be hunted by various tribes without necessitating dangerous departures from their own countries. - (Savages of Gor, Chapter 6, Sentence #42)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 42 The same herd, thus, may be hunted by various tribes without necessitating dangerous departures from their own countries.

Book 17. (7 results) Savages of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
6 39 On the other hand, that their numbers are incredibly abundant is indubitable.
6 40 These herds, too, interestingly enough, appear to have their annual grazing patterns, usually describing a gigantic oval, seasonally influenced, which covers many thousands of pasangs.
6 41 These peregrinations, as would be expected, tend to take a herd in and out of the territory of given tribes at given times.
6 42 The same herd, thus, may be hunted by various tribes without necessitating dangerous departures from their own countries.
6 43 The kailiauk is a migratory beast, thusly, but only in a rather special sense.
6 44 It does not, for example, like certain flocks of birds, venture annually in roughly linear paths from the north to the south, and from the south to the north, covering thousands of pasangs in a series of orthogonal alternations.
6 45 The kailiauk must feed as it moves, and it is simply too slow for this type of migration.
On the other hand, that their numbers are incredibly abundant is indubitable. These herds, too, interestingly enough, appear to have their annual grazing patterns, usually describing a gigantic oval, seasonally influenced, which covers many thousands of pasangs. These peregrinations, as would be expected, tend to take a herd in and out of the territory of given tribes at given times. The same herd, thus, may be hunted by various tribes without necessitating dangerous departures from their own countries. The kailiauk is a migratory beast, thusly, but only in a rather special sense. It does not, for example, like certain flocks of birds, venture annually in roughly linear paths from the north to the south, and from the south to the north, covering thousands of pasangs in a series of orthogonal alternations. The kailiauk must feed as it moves, and it is simply too slow for this type of migration. - (Savages of Gor, Chapter 6)