Book 18. (1 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
28
339
The discipline of the Yellow Knives now became more meaningful.
The discipline of the Yellow Knives now became more meaningful.
- (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 28, Sentence #339)
Book 18. (7 results) Blood Brothers of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
28
336
I now realized that was false.
28
337
Somehow they had come into league with the Kinyanpi and, perhaps through them, and in virtue of some special considerations, the nature of which I suspected I knew, been able to make contact with, and enlist the aid of, Yellow Knives.
28
338
A fearful pattern had suddenly emerged.
28
339
The discipline of the Yellow Knives now became more meaningful.
28
340
So, too, did their apparent willingness to fight in the half darkness of dusk.
28
341
Suddenly, too, starkly plausible, became such untypical anomalies of the Barrens as the meretricious proposal of a false peace, the spurious pretext of a council in order to gather together and decimate the high men of the Kaiila, and even the unprecedented sacrilege of attacking a people at the time of its great dances and festivals.
28
342
These things spoke not of the generalship of the Barrens but of a generalship alien to the Barrens, a generalship of a very different sort of mind.
I now realized that was false.
Somehow they had come into league with the Kinyanpi and, perhaps through them, and in virtue of some special considerations, the nature of which I suspected I knew, been able to make contact with, and enlist the aid of, Yellow Knives.
A fearful pattern had suddenly emerged.
The discipline of the Yellow Knives now became more meaningful.
So, too, did their apparent willingness to fight in the half darkness of dusk.
Suddenly, too, starkly plausible, became such untypical anomalies of the Barrens as the meretricious proposal of a false peace, the spurious pretext of a council in order to gather together and decimate the high men of the Kaiila, and even the unprecedented sacrilege of attacking a people at the time of its great dances and festivals.
These things spoke not of the generalship of the Barrens but of a generalship alien to the Barrens, a generalship of a very different sort of mind.
- (Blood Brothers of Gor, Chapter 28)