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Book 18. (1 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Individual Quote)

There was laughter, and joking, the sounds of playing children, the calls of women, the shouts of men, the bustle of people moving about, many in their best, conversing, parading, visiting, occasionally the squeals of kaiila. - (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 7, Sentence #109)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
7 109 There was laughter, and joking, the sounds of playing children, the calls of women, the shouts of men, the bustle of people moving about, many in their best, conversing, parading, visiting, occasionally the squeals of kaiila.

Book 18. (7 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
7 106 Inside the lodge Winyela lay on her stomach, on the robes, and, her head lying on her bound hands, wept.
7 107 I could hear the sounds of the camp outside.
7 108 It was a time of festival.
7 109 There was laughter, and joking, the sounds of playing children, the calls of women, the shouts of men, the bustle of people moving about, many in their best, conversing, parading, visiting, occasionally the squeals of kaiila.
7 110 It seemed a shame that Winyela was so miserable.
7 111 One might have hoped that, at this time, rather, in the bright afternoon, she would have been adorned and marched, clothed or unclothed, a rope on her neck, beside Canka's kaiila, he in his finery, that he might display her to the Isbu, and the other bands.
7 112 Many of the young braves of the various bands were participating in this sort of promenade.
Inside the lodge Winyela lay on her stomach, on the robes, and, her head lying on her bound hands, wept. I could hear the sounds of the camp outside. It was a time of festival. There was laughter, and joking, the sounds of playing children, the calls of women, the shouts of men, the bustle of people moving about, many in their best, conversing, parading, visiting, occasionally the squeals of kaiila. It seemed a shame that Winyela was so miserable. One might have hoped that, at this time, rather, in the bright afternoon, she would have been adorned and marched, clothed or unclothed, a rope on her neck, beside Canka's kaiila, he in his finery, that he might display her to the Isbu, and the other bands. Many of the young braves of the various bands were participating in this sort of promenade. - (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 7)