• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"love "

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

Love War It was early in the morning, several days after Saphrar's banquet, that Kamchak and myself, among some hundreds of others of the Four Wagon Peoples, came to the Plains of a Thousand Stakes, some pasangs distant from lofty Turia. - (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #1)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 1 love War It was early in the morning, several days after Saphrar's banquet, that Kamchak and myself, among some hundreds of others of the Four Wagon Peoples, came to the Plains of a Thousand Stakes, some pasangs distant from lofty Turia.

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

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
9 490 Then she ran up the stairs, weeping, veil disarranged, both hands jerking at the collar.
9 491 With a cry she disappeared.
9 492 "Have no fear, Saphrar of Turia," Kamras was saying, "I shall slay the Tuchuk sleen—and I shall do so slowly".
10 1 love War It was early in the morning, several days after Saphrar's banquet, that Kamchak and myself, among some hundreds of others of the Four Wagon Peoples, came to the Plains of a Thousand Stakes, some pasangs distant from lofty Turia.
10 2 Judges and craftsmen from Ar, hundreds of pasangs away, across the Cartius, were already at the stakes, inspecting them and preparing the ground between them.
10 3 These men, as in every year, I learned, had been guaranteed safe passage across the southern plains for this event.
10 4 The journey, even so, was not without its dangers, but they had been well recompensed, from the treasure chests of both Turia and the Wagon Peoples.
Then she ran up the stairs, weeping, veil disarranged, both hands jerking at the collar. With a cry she disappeared. "Have no fear, Saphrar of Turia," Kamras was saying, "I shall slay the Tuchuk sleen—and I shall do so slowly". love War It was early in the morning, several days after Saphrar's banquet, that Kamchak and myself, among some hundreds of others of the Four Wagon Peoples, came to the Plains of a Thousand Stakes, some pasangs distant from lofty Turia. Judges and craftsmen from Ar, hundreds of pasangs away, across the Cartius, were already at the stakes, inspecting them and preparing the ground between them. These men, as in every year, I learned, had been guaranteed safe passage across the southern plains for this event. The journey, even so, was not without its dangers, but they had been well recompensed, from the treasure chests of both Turia and the Wagon Peoples. - (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 10)