Book 4. (1 results) Nomads of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
117
* * * * Some two hours later we reached the encampment of the Tuchuks and made our way among the wagons and the cooking pots and playing children.
* * * * Some two hours later we reached the encampment of the Tuchuks and made our way among the wagons and the cooking pots and playing children.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 11, Sentence #117)
Book 4. (7 results) Nomads of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
114
Elizabeth Cardwell, unbound, had already taken her position on the other side of Kamchak's kaiila, beside his right stirrup.
11
115
Then Kamchak, with his two women, and I, left the Plains of a Thousand Stakes and set out for the wagons of the Tuchuks.
11
116
Behind us we could hear still the sounds of combat, the cries of men.
11
117
* * * * Some two hours later we reached the encampment of the Tuchuks and made our way among the wagons and the cooking pots and playing children.
11
118
Slave girls ran beside us, jeering at Kamchak's tethered prize; free women looked up from their ladles and kettles to stare with jaundiced eye at yet another Turian woman brought to the camp.
11
119
"She was First Stake," called Kamchak to the jeering girls.
11
120
"What were you?" Then he turned his kaiila suddenly toward them and they would break and run screaming and laughing and then, like a flock of birds, take up once more the pursuit.
Elizabeth Cardwell, unbound, had already taken her position on the other side of Kamchak's kaiila, beside his right stirrup.
Then Kamchak, with his two women, and I, left the Plains of a Thousand Stakes and set out for the wagons of the Tuchuks.
Behind us we could hear still the sounds of combat, the cries of men.
* * * * Some two hours later we reached the encampment of the Tuchuks and made our way among the wagons and the cooking pots and playing children.
Slave girls ran beside us, jeering at Kamchak's tethered prize; free women looked up from their ladles and kettles to stare with jaundiced eye at yet another Turian woman brought to the camp.
"She was First Stake," called Kamchak to the jeering girls.
"What were you?" Then he turned his kaiila suddenly toward them and they would break and run screaming and laughing and then, like a flock of birds, take up once more the pursuit.
- (Nomads of Gor, Chapter 11)